It’s hard to tell on my phone, but it looks like your OALis 71mm, and you have 22mm of bullet in the neck. That seems wrong. Shouldn’t your OAL be in the 80+mm range?case length is correct, as well as barrel length. we are not talking about precise modeling here.
using standard values we get 2955 fps out of 24" barrel. it's just wrong.
try repeating that in your GRT.View attachment 1591505
The scale for n165 is well into the green zoneWhat is the scale of confidence in the powder burn model when selecting N165 from the list? Thats the red to green scale next to powder in the selection window. It might have low confidence from only a few examples submitted.
Why don’t you load it and shoot it. Whichever prediction you choose. I use GRT and it predicts the same phenomenon for me and when I shoot it my velocity is higher than its prediction. If I loaded off a reloading manual, I’d probably blow up my gun. Hornady says I can use 31.7 grains to get 3350fps. I use 30.8 and it goes 3390. If I put 31.7 in it, I’d be in trouble. I don’t trust reloading manuals.case length is correct, as well as barrel length. we are not talking about precise modeling here.
using standard values we get 2955 fps out of 24" barrel. it's just wrong.
try repeating that in your GRT.View attachment 1591505
I have had GRT initially predict close to actual results many times. And after going back in an entering actual velocity measurements it seems to then predict velocities pretty good and therefore I feel the pressures it outputs are close to reality.I agree with the above remarks. So, what’s the point of using reloading program such as GRY if the data it produces are highly inaccurate. Also OBT times are questionable then.
I haven't run into a case like this => generally/almost always, GRT is in the ballpark.I agree with the above remarks. So, what’s the point of using reloading program such as GRY if the data it produces are highly inaccurate. Also OBT times are questionable then.