Good test Jackie.
No reason why you should, & I'm not even sure how one could do it, but after a barrel has been fired, say, 500 rounds, is there any runout (difference?) between the individual lands in the throat? I'd be there is. So maybe that's a plus -- if the throat won't straighten a crooked round, neither will it crookify (!?) a straight one.
In the ever-changing world of benchrest fashion, Long-range shooters are beginning to find an advantage to using a seating depth where bullets are jumped. As far as testing goes, I wonder how many short-range benchrest shooters never test a jumped seating depth? I'd have to raise my hand on that one, which is pretty bad follow-the-pack thinking, since and I have done the work & wound up using jumped bullets in some of my 1K rifles.
Just another sheep,
Charles
No reason why you should, & I'm not even sure how one could do it, but after a barrel has been fired, say, 500 rounds, is there any runout (difference?) between the individual lands in the throat? I'd be there is. So maybe that's a plus -- if the throat won't straighten a crooked round, neither will it crookify (!?) a straight one.
In the ever-changing world of benchrest fashion, Long-range shooters are beginning to find an advantage to using a seating depth where bullets are jumped. As far as testing goes, I wonder how many short-range benchrest shooters never test a jumped seating depth? I'd have to raise my hand on that one, which is pretty bad follow-the-pack thinking, since and I have done the work & wound up using jumped bullets in some of my 1K rifles.
Just another sheep,
Charles