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The answer is a definitive YES, it matters. However, as some have pointed out, the errors may easily be eclipsed by other factors, so as to not affect the final outcome significantly for most shooters. The definitive factors that headspace as you describe it affects in accuracy are: 1) Alignment of the bullet into the leade/throat 2) Initial non-axial movement of the bullet 3) Fit of the bullet into the bore. on 1: If the chamber is sized to center the cartridge correctly, the bullet is aligned with the bore perfectly. If the chamber is oversize, having it fall back slightly from the end of the chamber can cause mis-alignment. on 2: As the powder charge goes off, the bullet inertia is greater than the case inertia because of higher weight. The case therefore moves backwards; this can cause non-axial forces to be placed on the bullet by the moving brass, particularly as the pressure hasn't built enough to expand the brass fully to the chamber. The brass may also expand non-uniformly, adding to the non-axial forces exerted by the brass onto the bullet. The case head not square to the breechblock puts considerable side force on the case also. on 3: If headspace is excessive, and the cartridge is held back by the bullet jammed into the lands, there is a short ring of unsupported bullet between the brass end and the throat. The bullet can bump up into this space, and then get swaged down into the leade/throat/barrel. This deformation of the bullet can make it less accurate. All this is theoretical, the actual effect on the accuracy can be unmeasurable, or significant, depending on the severity of the unstabilizing forces applied to the bullet by each factor. To answer your question directly: I have found that seating the bullets out to jam into the rifling will improve accuracy with .45 cal lead bullets. I have also found that buying my brass and dies and mold to match my barrel, and then specifying a reamer that matches all those components so as to eliminate all three factors above, along with careful chambering, makes .45 cal lead bullets a lot more accurate. So my answer is that, in MY experience, minimizing headspace and chamber length and chamber diameter issues, along with good workmanship is the single biggest factor in achieving good accuracy. I also believe that given no control over the chamber (existing rifle), jamming the bullet into the rifling is the best work-around you can do to improve accuracy.
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