forgot about powder having temperature effects. I’m using IMR4350.
At -30°F or C, strange things happen to lubricants. I would be concerned more with proper operation at those temps. People do hunt at that temp but not with regular lube. Currently at Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, Canada it is:Zero change? Heading for cold temps, rifle sighted in at 50 degrees. Any thoughts, suggestions appreciated.
Very interesting, thnx for sharingYou may want to check this out:
https://www.shootingsoftware.com/ftp/Pressure Factors.pdf
Running a 308 at 2880 with 168s at 300 yards 70°. Bullet drop(moa) is 3.9. Same data but -30 is a 4.1 drop(moa). Turns out with that cartridge, it's .75" difference from -30 to 70f. I didn't do a run from 0 to -30 but in my gun, it would be less. There's some difference but none that would be much on a larger animal. Definitely would matter on paper. Doubt the OP is shooting targets in -30. The 1000' elevation in my home state definitely is different than where you are shooting that 1.5" difference at 300 yards.Your zero will change for sure...i shoot from +70 to -30 and there is a 1.5" drop from zero at -30 at 300 yds.
I'll say thats a first. Barrel bore shrinkage with cold weather. I've experienced shrinkage in cold weather but it sure wasn't the bore of my gun barrel. No offense but I studied this quite in-depth and what seems to be the most affected issue of a gun barrel in sub zero temps is the barrels fatigue resistance. Metallurgists and barrel makers both have concluded this fact over and over. Stainless steel barrels are completely safe down too and beyond -55° but become more and more brittle beyond that. In fact the hunters comfort level will diminish so much so in temps below -30 that it's unlikely firing it will occur all that often. As far as temps shrinking a bore size and tightening the bore creating pressure issues is definitely something I haven't heard of. Again, I'm no metallurgist nor qualified barrel maker or gunsmith and cannot say it is not true. Just from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem possible. Maybe in a polymer or synthetic property object, I'd say absolutely.What is never mentioned is at -30 how much the steel in your barrel shrinks making for bore a little tighter. Make sure your loads are not near max you could have a pressure spike.
I'll say thats a first. Barrel bore shrinkage with cold weather. I've experienced shrinkage in cold weather but it sure wasn't the bore of my gun barrel. No offense but I studied this quite in-depth and what seems to be the most affected issue of a gun barrel in sub zero temps is the barrels fatigue resistance. Metallurgists and barrel makers both have concluded this fact over and over. Stainless steel barrels are completely safe down too and beyond -55° but become more and more brittle beyond that. In fact the hunters comfort level will diminish so much so in temps below -30 that it's unlikely firing it will occur all that often. As far as temps shrinking a bore size and tightening the bore creating pressure issues is definitely something I haven't heard of. Again, I'm no metallurgist nor qualified barrel maker or gunsmith and cannot say it is not true. Just from a common sense perspective, doesn't seem possible. Maybe in a polymer or synthetic property object, I'd say absolutely.
I'd be curious of your results. Wouldn't be that difficult if a deep freezer was used.I have assembled wear sleeves on shafts where i needed to put the shaft in sub zero freezer and heat the sleeve up red hot to get it to slide over the shaft. If one wasn't cold or hot enough it didn't slide on at all. But when they were where they needed to be it slid on like butter. You had one chance and only a few seconds to get that sleeve on. The metal in the barrel or even fine tuned extremely crisp trigger can't disobey the explanation or contraction due to heat or extreme cold. Maybe some metals expand or contact less but i feel is something to consider when shooting in extreme cold. I've hunted coyotes in those temps. At least a couple times every year. I should put a Mic on the barrel and see how much the does change when it gets that cold.
I'd be curious of your results. Wouldn't be that difficult if a deep freezer was used.
Yes I think residential deep freezers probably go down to -20 or so. Either way, I'd think that would be cold enough if there was going to be a change in dimension.Where i was working at the time and a freezer that would go down to like -40. Common deep freezers don't go that low but I've never checked house cold they get.