hepburnman wrote on Apr 15
th, 2022 at 11:15am:
This, and the previous post, is a bit of what I am trying to get at in that I can certainly see how case wall thickness would matter when shooting smokeless and shouldered-cases where the case-necks hold a copper-jacketed bullet tightly and in precise alignment to the bore.
In our case, using BP and lead alloy bullets, our case necks are not perfectly straight-sided, and our bullets slug-up on firing. I, for one, do not use any neck-tension and my philosophy is to try and have the bullet align with the bore, rather than have the case influence the bullet's alignment. I have a fairly tight freebore area to help with alignment and I also load the bullet out into the leade. My chamber (and cases) does have a fairly straight neck area but this is not perfect because the case wall thickness gradually increases towards the base.
Not sure I have a sufficient argument here for not mic-ing cases for case wall thickness uniformity, and sorting, but your post, Chris, helps and perhaps others can post their experiences with this and also other things that they have tried to increase accuracy.
One other question I would like answered is that with BP and alloy bullets what is the limit of accuracy that is possible; 1/2 MOA, 1/4 MOA? I can see that when at these levels of accuracy that a lot of factors come into play such as environmental conditions, type of rest (machine and rail system), come into play and therefore this would be a very subjective? answer.
Oh, I should have mentioned that I breach seat in my CPA's so it's a different sort of problem as the bullet never touches the case.
John shoots smokeless which is probably way more sensitive to case capacity changes. With BP I just don't think small changes are as noticeable for two reasons. 1) BP is not efficient and thus small changes mean less.
2) BP just isn't as accurate. I haven't seen anyone shooting BP groups as small as the smokeless ones that John posts.
With that said, I don't think there are too many people putting real effort into extreme accuracy with BP. There are some, but nothing like we see with smokeless.
As far as accuracy potential, I don't think there is anyone shooing sub-moa consistently with black powder, particularly with fixed ammo and ten shot groups at 200 or further. Sub moa groups can be done at distance and I have shot a number of them, but certainly not every time.
Chris.