Thanks everyone for all the input. I appreciate it, and am eager to learn. I’m sure you can all relate, sometimes life gets in the way of reporting back immediately.
Boyd,
I have no wind flags as of yet. I see a few diy versions out there. I enjoy building things (like the bipod) but am not opposed to buying commercial ones either. Is there a certain version/brand you recommend?
Beiruty,
Nice of you to model this for me in GRT. One reason my Quickload model seems so far off from yours might be case volume. For my first powder test I used new unfired Lapua brass. I suppose that isn’t ideal. Anyway, the one case I measured was 50.52gr water. Once-fired measured 51.1gr.
Alex,
In your experience, would my 8T stabilize the 115 VLD? The Berger tool shows it to be “marginal”.
X Count, Tommy, & Alex,
About the action/chassis fit: In my first post I made mention of barrel-to-forend movement (measured at the aluminum extension I machined), when loosening the rear screw. I had also tested for movement when loosening the front screw, and observed only .001”. However after reading your message Tommy, I reran that test this afternoon. I think the mistake I made the first time was to only snug back up the rear screw when loosening the front. Today, with the rear screw torqued to 65inlb, loosening the front screw shows 5 thousandths movement.
I don’t want to leave anything on the table, if it’s something I can fix. So I’d like to bed this if you all believe that’s best. I’ve bedded a few stocks before, but never a chassis. For stocks I used years ago, the Brownells Acraglass. Then used Devcon (was it 10100?) on my 243AI back in 2011. Recently I used Marine Tex gray and liked how that was to work with. Is that also appropriate for chassis bedding?
Is there a minimum thickness that should be used? I have a blast cabinet, and could blast that area of the chassis with aluminum oxide, if you think that would be a good move.
Some better results to report:
I did pick up a pound of A4350 yesterday. There was no H4350 on the shelf, nor were there any of the bullets the hive suggested. RKS kindly messaged me about a test method I was not familiar with; a POI/pressure test.
I went ahead and shot 20 rounds (plus two fouling shots, is two sufficient?) using the A4350, 105gr Amax at .004” jam (using your method of finding lands Alex). I tricked charges using an inexpensive Gempro 250. I caught myself at one point, of spacing out on the “one’s“ digit on the scale, and almost seating a bullet one grain light. Despite peoples suggestion to leave the chronograph at home, I confess to having used it again. The velocity recorded for the 41.20 load makes me think I trickled that one to only 40.20. I bet I messed that one up.
Below pic shows points of impact. Aiming points were the line intersections to the left of each hole. The two fouling shots used were loads left from the previous powder/bullet. They struck much closer to the aiming point. I did not adjust windage after firing the first round in this test.
I did my best to minimize shooter error. Boyd had coached me on some points on grasping the stock, etc. I was able to hold crosshairs‘ elevation quite steady. My heartbeat was causing small movement on windage however. Twice during this string of 20 shots, I gave 5mins cooling time. There was some breeze right-to-left. I was shooting on a field drive, fence with weeds on left, and corn (nearly bullet path height) on right.
Edit to add:
I used previously unfired cases on this test, so imagine that will shift results relative to fire-formed? Unfired cases held 50.52gr. Once-fired measure 51.1.
This iPad’s auto “correct” spelling is a pain…..
Another edit to add:
The data for 41.7 is likely also flawed. Hours after assembling these rounds, I realized I’d skipped manufacturing a 41.7. At that point I turned the Gempro 250 back on, and proceeded to trickle a “41.7”. But the velocity measured for that one is suspiciously low. This inexpensive scale does exhibit some form of warm-up drift. I think we should discount that data point.