Sheltowee
Well-known member
Indeed. Interesting that SC is so much more temp stable than the long cut flavor.H4831SC is about half of Varget
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Indeed. Interesting that SC is so much more temp stable than the long cut flavor.H4831SC is about half of Varget
This is what I’m talking about. Some of the older powders that aren’t included in the newer line ups being advertised as temp stable are actually pretty good and some are terrible.You look at the numbers and hodgons not fibbing or misleading about it being temperate insensitive. H4350 and you could shoot at -20 and at 100 degrees and only see less than a 20fps change. That's better than I thought it was. 4831sc is less than 10 fps for that same crazy temp spread. But reloader 25 would be a 190 fps difference
Absolutely right!You know, your informal range & shooting days are chock full of information IF you pay attention & take some simple but detailed notes.
Simple things such as temperature, humidity, rain, sleet snow, sunny.
Also your load data with powder, charge, primer, bullet.
Simple note taking can develop a pretty good dope card.
I don’t have any reason to shoot in July. I’ve had no issues with my handloads from the 70s to the teens.No offense, but if you're loading and shooting in Alabama where it is always 80 percent humidity and rarely below 30 degrees, you probably wouldn't see it much. I never had much speed variability when I was loading down there but I also knew I couldn't really step on the gas without hitting pressure quickly if I was doing load development in July.
Work up a load at zero degrees and shoot it at 95, you might find yourself with a problem.
I hit some spooky pressure early, below max book loads, with CFE223 and Win748. That was before I was chrono-ing, so hard to tell what the velocities were.I don’t have any reason to shoot in July. I’ve had no issues with my handloads from the 70s to the teens.
How much was your accuracy and velocity off with these loads that you’re referring to?
I don’t have any reason to shoot when it’s 100 degrees and 100% humidity here. However, the times I’ve done it, I didn’t see any pressure signs from my reloads like you experienced. Or when I shoot with it in the teens. Where a powder falls on a temp sensitivity chart hasn’t proven to be an issue for me with temps ranging from 100 degrees down to the teens. It sucks that it gave you issues, though.I hit some spooky pressure early, below max book loads, with CFE223 and Win748. That was before I was chrono-ing, so hard to tell what the velocities were.
Point is you’re less likely to encounter it in Alabama with a 50 degree swing than some people where summers are 90+ and late season can be in the single digits.
Dive off the deep end… get a Sokkia Field Book notebook for each rifle you own.I’ll probably end up being one of “those guys “ .
Won’t leave home without my Kestrel and chronograph.![]()
Easy there!!I’ll probably end up being one of “those guys “ .
Won’t leave home without my Kestrel and chronograph.![]()