CubCouper
Gold $$ Contributor
If it is the same rifle, barrel, rest setup, bench setup, and all that has changed is the powder lot, then I definitely would not look to blame the bedding or equipment issues.
Wind is always a factor, but it sounds like you have been testing in reasonable conditions. Temperature changes can make a tune shift a bit too. Just something to know.
All else being perfect (it never is of course), I'd look to the shape of the group for clues. In the BR world a rifle that is 'almost' perfect will show a sequence of group shapes
1) a couple bullets of vertical (load could be hotter, up a touch, fireball=.1-.2gr)
2) then more horizontal that the wind should give... (wind sensitive... a tiny touch hotter yet, fireball=.05 - .1gr more)
3) round-ish or triangular shaped groups -- probably the most forgiving tune!
4) up a tiny touch more and the groups can get really tiny -- one bullet hole! But these are usually seen as on the edge of being too hot, and a slight change in environment will make weird things happen, like...
5) next notch is 4-and-1 or 3-and-2 groups, where it'll put three or four bullets in one hole, then pitch one. Shooters usually say 'I pulled that one', but there is a good chance that the load is too hot. Go down a tiny touch.
6) The Blow Up -- where no bullets touch. You're exactly between accuracy nodes. Either go up a couple tenths or down a couple tenths depending on how close to max you are running.
Just from looking at the groups above, I'd try a couple different approaches: either 18.3 and 18.4 to see if it tightens up, or 18.2 and let the seating depth out .003 to .005. Both changes have the same effect of bumping start pressure to get from #2 to #3 above. Which one works better depends on what the gun likes!
Wind is always a factor, but it sounds like you have been testing in reasonable conditions. Temperature changes can make a tune shift a bit too. Just something to know.
All else being perfect (it never is of course), I'd look to the shape of the group for clues. In the BR world a rifle that is 'almost' perfect will show a sequence of group shapes
1) a couple bullets of vertical (load could be hotter, up a touch, fireball=.1-.2gr)
2) then more horizontal that the wind should give... (wind sensitive... a tiny touch hotter yet, fireball=.05 - .1gr more)
3) round-ish or triangular shaped groups -- probably the most forgiving tune!
4) up a tiny touch more and the groups can get really tiny -- one bullet hole! But these are usually seen as on the edge of being too hot, and a slight change in environment will make weird things happen, like...
5) next notch is 4-and-1 or 3-and-2 groups, where it'll put three or four bullets in one hole, then pitch one. Shooters usually say 'I pulled that one', but there is a good chance that the load is too hot. Go down a tiny touch.
6) The Blow Up -- where no bullets touch. You're exactly between accuracy nodes. Either go up a couple tenths or down a couple tenths depending on how close to max you are running.
Just from looking at the groups above, I'd try a couple different approaches: either 18.3 and 18.4 to see if it tightens up, or 18.2 and let the seating depth out .003 to .005. Both changes have the same effect of bumping start pressure to get from #2 to #3 above. Which one works better depends on what the gun likes!