pukeleeland
New member
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2011
- Messages
- 7
If both loads perform equally well, then I will go with the longer load so that I stay within that node longer with throat erosion.
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Based on your original data 3.600 seems to be your best node depth currently. I’d be curious to see the targets though.I just wanted to revisit that charge now that I have settled into a seating depth range...more curious than anything.
Based on your original data 3.600 seems to be your best node depth. I’d be curious to see the targets though.
If you generated a plot of 50 shots with the same load even a 3.0" MOA pattern would likely have two touching somewhere in the mix. The "two were good" temptation pretty much throws out any statistical or scientific approach to reloading. You only get to remove a shot if you called it as a flier at the time you pulled the trigger, not when you saw the result.The flier really concerned me with the 3.600" load. The 3.595" load actually had two shots that were touching. Their speeds were only 1 fps different and the 3rd shot was off a little.
All I can say, the rifle is shooting much better than the 1.25"--1.5" groups it was giving me the last couple of years. It was about to go down the road. This is the first time I have had to mess with seating depths to get sub MOA.
So, are we talking competitive shooter's here or hunter's? In hunting pretty much the only shots that count are the first two! Sometimes the animal will give you a third!Groups of 3 shots do not prove anything of the sort (heck one of them is 2 shots as he declared a flier). There are competitive shooters that use 10-30 shot groups which clearly show the correlation between low SD and MOA. There is no serious doubt of the connection. But again, for hunting, it may not matter to you.
I was referring to your suggestion that their is no correlation between ES and accuracy.So, are we talking competitive shooter's here or hunter's? In hunting pretty much the only shots that count are the first two! Sometimes the animal will give you a third!
Great point. If all a hunter is interested in is making sure you hit your elk as precisely as possible with the first shot, then this is the real test, not 5 shot groups out of a hot barrel. In fact, if you don't find the tweaking of handloading enjoyable buy a few different bullets in factory loads and do the same test - if any of them provide combined grouping over 3-5 trips to the range of less than 1.5 MOA you are ready with that brand to hunt at all reasonable distances.I'm also one of the odd ducks that will test my cold bore grouping. Hang 1 target, take 1 shot. Take target down.
Next day hang same target from yesterday, same POA and shoot 1 round.
I do this 3 times.
Depends mostly on the human element. Why if you have a rifle that will fire say a .250" group, won't it do it every time? Human element! Why does the rifle that never fired a group smaller than 1" all of a sudden come up with a 1/2" group? Human element. For all we know, that bad group you shoot the other day was your fault!All other things being equal how much will a 300 fps difference change the POI on a target 100 yards away? A half inch? One inch?
That cold bore test sounds like a good deal. I've read that some guy's actually shoot one shot a day to test their load. For some reason some people think the best shot your gonna get is that first one! Go figure. That's not to say I've ever done it, haven't. something I noticed over the years though, or so it seems, get your rifle to clean and the first shot or two are not in the same group as the next shots!I'm with Vikingsguy on this one.
Powder charge first. I like the ladder test, but whichever method you use, powder charge is first.
When i'm doing my ladder, i don't even take the chrono with me. I find myself getting too hung up on velocities.
Then seating depth from jam to 0.040" off the lands going in 0.010" increments. If i don't get good groupings from that, i'll explore a bigger jump, or try a different powder or bullet.
If i find one that's acceptable to me, then i'll load 10 & break out the chrono.
I do pay attention to both ES & SD, but more so on SD.
If you haven't done it yet, then after you've chosen your best grouping load, tune your action.
I'm also one of the odd ducks that will test my cold bore grouping. Hang 1 target, take 1 shot. Take target down.
Next day hang same target from yesterday, same POA and shoot 1 round.
I do this 3 times.
I don't own a CBTO tool, or cartridge comparater. More threads have started with "need help, i'm using my comparator"!
Before I go on a hunt I thoroughly clean and inspect my rifle. And then I go out and put 5 rounds through it. Ready to hunt. Not all rifles react to a first clean barrel shot oddly, but I have seen it enough that I make it my routine.something I noticed over the years though, or so it seems, get your rifle to clean and the first shot or two are not in the same group as the next shots!
First of all, maximizing performance can be fun - tinkering for some of us is fun. Second, the lower your fps SD and the better your groupings and the better your technique, the more room for error you have in the field when conditions are outside of your control. The odds of successfully and humanely shooting an animal in the field is a series of stack variances ("errors"). The more you choose to eliminate the less the chance of unacceptable error. Thirdly, fun.
I've heard of some Rugers that liked 20 or more for the copper.I’ve seen factory barrels that wouldn’t group well until at least 8-10 rounds down the barrel. It seems like those were probably a rough or loose barrel and needed some more fouling.
You will never convince Don of anything logical.Groups of 3 shots do not prove anything of the sort (heck one of them is 2 shots as he declared a flier). There are competitive shooters that use 10-30 shot groups which clearly show the correlation between low SD and MOA. There is no serious doubt of the connection. But again, for hunting, it may not matter to you.
Often I don't reply to convince an individual poster, sometimes it is just to clear the record for the other readers.You will never convince Don of anything logical.