That's OK, sometimes I obsess too!
Hornady 130 sp bullets. Any comments would be appreciated.
LD
LD,
There have been times in my life where I obsessed too. I am one of those kind of guys that "just has to know why." You seem to be the same kind of fellow. Nothing wrong with wanting to be sure about something. It gives you piece of mind to know "how come?"
I don't have the Hornady manual you mentioned. One thing I wanted to ask though was: "Do you have the EXACT same bullets they are using in the recipe?"
If not, that could be part of the problem. A bullet with a more rounded ogive will seat to a different OAL and still be the same weight. It is possible too that their bullet has changed minutely as all things man made have tolerances. When two parts at the top of a tolerance are combined you have problem "X", put two parts together that are at the bottom of their respective tolerances and viola, you have problem "Y".
In reloading you have tolerances too. Minimum and maximum case length, yada, yada, yada.
I have loaded pistol bullets that stuck in the case a difference of .030" from the usual bullet I used to have the velocity increase over 150fps, almost 200fps to be honest.
The part that sticks out of the case, making the OAL is not the problem. It is the part that is in the case that is the problem. Look at this picture:
Both of these bullets are the exact same weight. Notice the ogive. One is much more tapered than the other. If I seat them to the same OAL then the longer bullet has more in the case. That can be a problem, or not, depending on other factors, such as powder charge and interference with the rifling.
In my light target loads with these 45ACP bullets its not going to matter. Change things around a mite, go to some of the high pressure 38spl loads I am known to run, and it might make all the difference in the world.
As for crimping rifle bullets, it isn't needed if all you do is shoot from a bench at paper. If you are going afield, are going to be encountering rough hunting conditions or are using your ammo in a tube magazine (not for the the 270 but others)or in a semi auto rifle, it is recommended in most loading tutorials to use a firm crimp.
Without belaboring a point, if you start at the low end of the data for the powder and work your way up, you should have no problem with the reduced OAL.
If it was me, I would load up a few, 5 or so, and run them over the chronograph. If they are in the neighborhood of what the book says a minimum charge should run, you should be able to work up from there. If the velocity is higher at those loads, you may/will have to stop before you reach the top of the printed data. That will be a win/win for you. Maximum velocity with less powder. What could be wrong with that?
