I suppose most most of us that handload and go to extremes to wring a tiny bit more accuracy out of a given rifle obsess over details. One area of precision I come up a bit short in is overall cartridge length. I adjust the seating die until I get the cartridge length where I want it, and then find length varying in subsequent rounds, sometimes by .006" or even a little better (not every round, but enough to trouble me). I've decided there are 4 potential sources of variation and would like your feedback on them:
1. Caliper. The idea being my digital caliper isn't that precise, and that maybe my cartridges are all identical length, but my caliper isn't sensitive enough to determine that (it's a Frankford Arsenal digital caliper)
2. Seating die. Perhaps my dies aren't precise enough to give ultra-consistent overall cartridge lengths (I have Redding, RCBS, and Forster dies).
3. Bullets. Maybe my seating die is fine, but length variation is due to variability in length of the bullets I'm using.
4. Any combination of the above 3.
Without a 25 pound, heavy, benchrest rifle, maybe the length variance I'm dealing with doesn't matter. But as I stated earlier, I obsess over small details. Any comments or ideas?