DLT
Silver $$ Contributor
How did you know “ When it shot that big verticle I knew it was close” ???? I’m trying to learn how and what to look for while developing. I’m sure experience is a huge part of it thank youHere's an example of what I'm referring to when suggesting a seating depth .010 past the T.P. when you start tuning. After my post this morning about it, I headed to the range to shake out my new '22 ACM' (Anti CreedMoor). Other than f-forming Lapua 22-250 cases to fit the chamber, it had never been to the range before.
With the seater stem adjusted so it put the bullet .010 longer than the 'T.P., I just tuned it with the powder measure. When it shot that big vertical at 38.5 (rt target), I knew it was real close. Added .5 gr. more to 39.0 and it shot three into a little dot (left target) with a bit of a weather report to indicate the 3 o'clock winds from 12-14. It hung in there for another half grain at 39.5 and I called it good at that point.
Without a firm jam/seat of the bullet, it would have been like pushing a rope....juggling powder weight and seating depth. Including the three shots to get on paper and establish a zero at 100, this 39.0 gr load were shots # 16, 17 and 18. After cleaning the barrel, I tried another powder but didn't find anything to write home about.
Will go back out and reshoot the 39.0 and 39.5 with 5 shot groups. I expect no surprises.
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Good shootin'-Al
P.S. I agree with not jamming the bullet hard on a live varmint or hunting rig. .010 'in' isn't much of a 'jam' (another misnomer).