|
Cat Whisperer, i would be tempted to select 10 bullets in such a way that they span from the lightest to the heaviest cast in that session, and 10 bullets that you deem perfect and uniform and of the same weight. I would load them in 10 cartridges (or breach seat them, whatever)marked "bad bullets" and 10 cartridges for "good bullets", and would label carefully. A third group of 10 bullets i would use for fouling shots, after labeling. I would shoot 10 fouling shots and after installing 2 targets of the same type, labeled for "bad" and "good" bullets, i would fire 1 bad bullet in the bad target, followed by one good bullet in the good target, and alternate this way, keeping each bullet group on it's designated target. I know that one would tend to think that the target shot with "good", sorted bullets will be better, but i have yet to see proof. Assuming that the cast bullets are not seriously mangled and defective, i expect that you will see no difference. Shooters sort their bullets, use esoteric alloys blended on full moon, bullet lubes squeezed from manatee tear drops, and keep their pots at exactly 699.24 F because someone who won a competition did so. And if someone who won a competition comes up with a wacky bullet and caliber, everyone follows suit. Why not use a pragmatic, methodical, scientific method to try what works? By the way, i saw a 110 year old 32-40 rifle with the most evil looking bore you can imagine, never cleaned, that shoots fixed ammo with bullets cast hard out of a $60 mold, didn't even ask about powder and bullet lube...Well, the rifle hits golf balls at 200 yards regularly. None of the techniques, methods, or suggestions discussed on this board and elevated to fetish status are used to load for that rifle. What is different is the owner, who has an open mind and who tries what works in a methodical and analytical way. Maybe sorting bullets works for some shooters, it may be a waste of time for others.
|