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Where? I've been laboriously working my way through all the individual powder characteristics descriptions and there are one or two pretty broad references to temperature stability, but nothing at all in this aspect for most.
In the introductory / overview blurb to the rifle powders, there is among the list of attributes:
⇒They’re extremely temperature stable
Temperature stability in powders has always been a consideration, but with the recent improvements in Long Range shooting, it has become a factor of major concern to shooters. Firing at long ranges places greater demands on ammo, equipment and the shooter himself. Enabling a shooter to meet these demands means refining the process, and eliminating those variables which reduce hit probability. The production of increasingly temperature insensitive propellants allows for greatly reduced Extreme Spreads and Standard Deviation, which translates directly to less vertical dispersion on target.
Every propellant manufacturer I can think of has made the broad claim that "our products are extremely temperature stable" for years .... and that includes manufacturers and some of their grades that have been anything but!
I saw a former Capstone employee say in a post on this forum maybe 18 months back that it was a great trial to Capstone that Viht won't get up and shout about what they've been doing in this respect over the last few years risking the impression they're being left behind by competitors. (Also, no fancy marketing name like 'Extreme' or 'TZ' .... but he didn't say that!) I'd just like to know which grades have 'changed' and if so by how much. Do any enhancements apply to both N100 and 500 ranges and if that's a 'yes' do they apply equally?
The other product enhancement that all manufacturers are chasing - decoppering / anti-fouling does merit a large section of the website including before and after treatment 30-06 bore photos taken after 50 and 100 rounds. Why not temperature stability too if there is a significant across the board improvement?
N150 has always been a very stable grade and it is one of the few where temperature gets a mention in the the website's more detailed description, and as far as I can see the only one whose description suggests a reformulation / enhancement:
Combining Vihtavuori’s latest decoppering technology and enhanced temperature stability, N150 is a tremendously versatile powder with a lot of options even for the demanding handloader.
Don't get me wrong. I'm a great Viht fan and very heavy user of some grades, especially N150/160/165 and their performance and lot to lot consistency is and always has been excellent. (I've used N160 since it was introduced onto the UK market in 1985 many years before any Viht products were exported to the US. That's getting on for 35 years of satisfied continuous use.) I'd just like a bit of clarity here, and I'm sure I'm not alone.
The N-500 series of powders AND N-150 are temperature stable powders.
Why would that be?And what about N-140? It should be more stable than N-150
Also wondering about N140. Seems to be pretty stable, but have only chrono'd in ~25deg differences.And what about N-140? It should be more stable than N-150
New Vv n160 is nothing like the 2015.
Apparently 'faster' or 'slower' than older lots?
@Laurie I've shot my N150 load in temperatures from the upper 40Fs to low 50Fs, early mornings in Raton and matches in New England to 100F+ in Shreveport LA. The load was solid in all of it. I'm sure it's faster at 100F but the load shot flat.
On their web-site they list them ALL... And one of our shooters in AZ has tested N150 from winter to summer with excellent results as far as temp stability goes. He is using it in his .308 for F-T/R..
Hello Jade! I have come up with my own "chart" for many powders. "My" chart is based on years and years of experience. As you postulate, the VV chart is incorrect! On a fast lot of Varget, VV N150 is a shade slower. However, on a slow lot of Varget, N150 and Varget are right on top of one another. It is NOT dependent on the "consistent burn rate of the Viht powders", it is more based on the INconsistent burn rate of the Hodgdon lines!A few of us FTR shooters have been using N150 with good results.
After shooting quite a bit of N150 since 2014 in two different .308 FTR rifles I have a hard time believing this chart. N150 is VERY close to Varget burn rate in reality, not close to H4350 and seems to be pretty dang temp stable. I've shot it in 100 degree temps in summer time matches and 30-40 degree temps in winter matches here without any issues. Just my .02
A few of us FTR shooters have been using N150 with good results.
After shooting quite a bit of N150 since 2014 in two different .308 FTR rifles I have a hard time believing this chart. N150 is VERY close to Varget burn rate in reality, not close to H4350 and seems to be pretty dang temp stable. I've shot it in 100 degree temps in summer time matches and 30-40 degree temps in winter matches here without any issues. Just my .02
As you postulate, the VV chart is incorrect! On a fast lot of Varget, VV N150 is a shade slower. However, on a slow lot of Varget, N150 and Varget are right on top of one another.
2015 44.7 N150View attachment 1123185
I'm shooting the 200 hybrid just to clarify.Dean, I did some chrono testing a couple days ago. Berger 200.20X bullet was running 2647 ftps avg. with 44.3 gr N150. Lot of powder was manufactured 12-1-2015