Thanks. Was wondering what was giving that much velocity with these bullets.Everyone's least favorite: .223 WSSM.
I come up with a 1.16 stability factor for the 88 ELD. 1.240 length. .274 G7 BC. 3350 fps. 1000' elevation. Possibly your elevation is much much greater than mine. That would be the only factor that could make you stability factor in the 1.4s.I threw this load together to test and came up with this:
.224 88 ELD-M
3298fps using Reloder 26
26" 1:8 twist (1.40 stability factor per Berger's calculator)
Drop seems to jive with Factory G7 BC out to 950 yards.
200 yards prone with a bipod/rear bag.
5 shots upper left, 6 in the middle.
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Plastic tips throw off the calculator. It's been suggested that it's closer to reality if you subtract the tip from the length. Either way, they are easier to stabilize than the calculator suggests.I come up with a 1.16 stability factor for the 88 ELD. 1.240 length. .274 G7 BC. 3350 fps. 1000' elevation. Possibly your elevation is much much greater than mine. That would be the only factor that could make you stability factor in the 1.4s.
Great to know. Seems so.Plastic tips throw off the calculator. It's been suggested that it's closer to reality if you subtract the tip from the length. Either way, they are easier to stabilize than the calculator suggests.
I come up with a 1.16 stability factor ... Possibly your elevation is much much greater than mine
Hell you could almost get away with a 9 twist. Elevation makes the biggest difference. Velocity makes the smallest differenceMy house is 6400'. The ranges I shoot are 5200', 6600', 6650' and 7280'. But when camping/plinking I'll go up to 10,500' to escape the summer heat. I am aware that sea level will likely cause me issues.
Elevation makes the biggest difference. Velocity makes the smallest difference
It's pretty easy to run the numbers. I hunt antelope in Wyoming at around 7700'. My residence is around 675'. That 7000' makes a 300 fps/300 ft lbs and 3 MOA difference at 1000 yards (284 win/162 grain). Pretty significantThough many will argue, the above is absolutely correct. Velocity helps a little, but nothing like elevation.
Very helpful insight for this new owner of a 22-250 7twist 28” Hardy match barrel hearing mostly naysayers and much more doom and gloom with 7t. Looking to use 80 & 88gr ELDMs and thinking RL26 might do. Any starting Load insights around this would be most appreciated.I run a 22250AI with 90gr vlds out of a 7 twist at 3100 +/- 20fps in my PRS rifle. This is my second bbl and second year on this combo. Barrels get hot, fouled and most matches are in the 100round count range with two day matches and larger events doubling that number. I can doccument that in 2600 rounds I have had zero bullets blow up in flight. I am planning to go to 22 creed or a 22 creed improved next year and pushing them at 3150ish or the sierra 95's at 3100ish depending on accuracy. I am NOT going to shoot anything faster than 7 twist.
If you do the math on RPMs you can compare the bullet speed/twist/RPM and get an idea on what's going on when compared to the way I am shooting them.
As a side note. I have another 22250 AI 8 twist running 3150-70ish with the 90 bergers and they are stable with no reduction in BC noted. If you look around I think you will find most of the faster twist and bullet failure propaganda has been pushed and repeated by people NOT actually shooting them. I have read many times that the 90s will stabilize at 3100+ from an 8 twist from people wbo are actually shooting them.
I personally think some of the bullet failure stories probably originated due to carbon rings causing pressure and bullet stress. For some reason I do "think" I see more carbon build up in this specific combo. Nothing set in stone, just an observation.
Hope that helps somebody.
Very helpful insight for this new owner of a 22-250 7twist 28” Hardy match barrel hearing mostly naysayers and much more doom and gloom with 7t. Looking to use 80 & 88gr ELDMs and thinking RL26 might do. Any starting Load insights around this would be most appreciated.
Very helpful insight for this new owner of a 22-250 7twist 28” Hardy match barrel hearing mostly naysayers and much more doom and gloom with 7t. Looking to use 80 & 88gr ELDMs and thinking RL26 might do. Any starting Load insights around this would be most appreciated.
I'm not going to get another 7 twist 22. I think any future barrels will be 8 twist shooting the 75-80s. My future guns in any caliber will also be built to fall under that 300k rpm limit. The 90s just aren't a very good tradeoff in bigger than 223 cartridges. They are so specialized around that FTR niche and I don't think that recoil is significantly reduced from a 6BR variant shooting 105s when both are in ~16lb rifles. There seem to be no advantages.
I'm excited to try the 95s. They may completely redeem 7twist 22BR for me. The last hold out if the 95s aren't good is the 90SMK.Agree on anything but 95s. 7.5 or 7.7 or anything above 7 would be good. If you can push 3k plus 8 works for me.
I hearing many naysayers of doom and gloom with 7 twist shooting anything or they just blow up everything....I’ll never have 7 twist ever again. What is the failure mode and root cause? only when 7T is pushed shooting 50gr, 60gr, 70gr , to shooting 88s or 90/95 only. And there are quite a few that also claim they are shooting 50 - 55gr and 88s with a 7t and just Loving it with single ragged hole accuracy.Very helpful insight for this new owner of a 22-250 7twist 28” Hardy match barrel hearing mostly naysayers and much more doom and gloom with 7t. Looking to use 80 & 88gr ELDMs and thinking RL26 might do. Any starting Load insights around this would be most appreciated.