Was recently reading an article that was based partly on some work done by German Salazar and a member of a Canadian Shooting group.
He was exploring the capabilities of the 90 gr VLD as a LR bullet.
In his conclusions he determined that (for his test rifle) a load of 26.2 gr VV N550 was optimum, yielding speeds around 2850 or so.
In consulting a burn rate chart I see that VV N550 is the slower of the two at #120 and H-4350 is a little faster at #115 (Hodgdon Burn Rate Chart).
Has anyone else explored H-4350 in the .223 Rem with 90 gr bullets.
The rifle is a 26" bbl, 3-groove, 1:7 twist. Has been throated so the 90 VLD can be seated at the lands while the pressure ring is about .010" or so above the shoulder/neck junction. I can move the bullet from jammed, to a sizable jump without reducing powder volume (any more than the .223 case has already been reduced
)
I'm interested in any suggestions or comments on H-4350 AND the 90 VLD.
Just curious as I have 10# of H-4350 and -Zero- VV550. Most other powders I have, or can get easily, are too slow in resulting muzzle velocity.
He was exploring the capabilities of the 90 gr VLD as a LR bullet.
In his conclusions he determined that (for his test rifle) a load of 26.2 gr VV N550 was optimum, yielding speeds around 2850 or so.
In consulting a burn rate chart I see that VV N550 is the slower of the two at #120 and H-4350 is a little faster at #115 (Hodgdon Burn Rate Chart).
Has anyone else explored H-4350 in the .223 Rem with 90 gr bullets.
The rifle is a 26" bbl, 3-groove, 1:7 twist. Has been throated so the 90 VLD can be seated at the lands while the pressure ring is about .010" or so above the shoulder/neck junction. I can move the bullet from jammed, to a sizable jump without reducing powder volume (any more than the .223 case has already been reduced

I'm interested in any suggestions or comments on H-4350 AND the 90 VLD.
Just curious as I have 10# of H-4350 and -Zero- VV550. Most other powders I have, or can get easily, are too slow in resulting muzzle velocity.