Any of you use your same loads for the colder temps?
We shoot 12 months a year in Holton, Michigan. We are lucky in that the Holton Gun Club has the clubhouse and an enclosed area attached with 3- benches. This enclosed area I'm guessing to be about 18 x 20. From the 3 benches one can shoot at 75 yards, 100 yards, and 200 yards.
The club has informal shoots 3 Sundays a month. January - March, Egg shoots 2- saturdays a month(shoot @ 100 yards), and Paper Score Shoots every Thursday. The egg shoots and the paper score shoots are 22LR only. Great practice for keeping your shooting sharp in the off season. The club routinely has 25-30 shooters attending these shoots. Great Winter shooting!
Oh, they do place 2 propane heaters in this normally unheated area to take the chill off. When its 10-15 degrees the heaters will warm this area to appx 40 degrees. It helps greatly that the club house is attached as the shooters will wander in and out of the club house to the shooting area. Hot Lunches are available for Shooters. Yep, lots of senior shooters with time on their hands waiting for nicer weather to return so they can once again enjoy centerfire shoots.
Never tried the "Hot Hands"...that would help me a great deal . I am only good for an hour or so when it's in the 20s-30s .I shoot all year around at the range except when the temperature drops below 30 degree and / or winds are over 20 mph.
In the winter I dress appropriately and use Under Armour form fitting gloves, a hand warmer muff with "Hot Hands" disposable hand warmers. It works quite well and I can get in about an hour or so of comfortable practice time before I become uncomfortable. It's better than sitting in the house watching reruns of "Gunsmoke" which I've seen 50 times.
Any of you use your same loads for the colder temps?
You know what's nice about shooting in the winter cold?
Having a stiff Maker's Mark afterwards while sitting in front of the fireplace and studying your targets.It don't get no better than that except in a lust green hay field in late May that has just been cut exposing copious amounts of active ground hog holes.
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I don’t shoot f class but I second this. Barrel takes no time at all to cool down, another benefit is I don’t get eaten alive by deer flys and ticks like I would in the summer. I love winter shootingWinter time is my favorite time to shoot, working on a load for my 6.5 now. Temps keep my barrel good and cool, not much vapor on the air to make it where you can't see through the heat waves.
I tested a match rifle before sending it to its' new owner (in Minnesota) a few years ago, and made the mistake of telling him that it was cold at the range (in OK) that morning. He mentioned that he'd shot a match the previous day in temperatures that were much colder.
Some powders/primers do well at low temperatures, but some do not. For .22LR, try ammo made for biathlon (like Lapua Polar Biathlon).
For centerfire, recommend you test your loads at the same temperatures that you expect to use them.