Falconpilot:
I am glad the 284 Shehane is working well for you. However, and respectfully, some shooters might be confused by the posts. I will try to clear that up.
What you see in the 'article' are only field tests. The tests with RL-17 were conducted last October 26th,55.0 grains), October 31st,55.5 and 56.0 grains) when the temps were still in the 50s. The November 2nd test with six rounds remaining of the 55.5 grain loads from the October 26th testing. The temp was 72 degrees and my two shots with 56.5 blew a primer and smoked another.
I stated that 56 grains would appear to be MAX and would probably need adjusting per the weather -- in your case 90+ degrees. And, I suggested that 55.0 to 55.5 would probably put you were you wanted to be.
I worked these loads up over a three day period. I hope you did the same and did not just jump on 56.0 grains of RL-17. Unless you special ordered your BAT with a small firing pin, and no ejector, that action will show ejection marks on the case and cratered primers when pressure gets high,I have owned seven BAT actions).
This is the exact reason some boards request or do not allow loads to be listed. Every barrel is different and each action has its limitations, even within the same brand, and different lots of the same powder can burn at a different rate.
I tried to warn people to be careful with RL-17. The pressure came quickly with no other signs whatsoever. No hard bolt lift, no flat primers, no expanded case heads, nothing -- until I went .5 grains heavier. H4831SC would have been giving me the red flag way before it was a problem.
For 47 years, I have always worked up loads the same -- with one form or another of Jason Baney's testing technique,he is the best). If I had used Quick Load, I might have seen the signs before I blew primers. I have always worked up to a max load for a base line for the rest of my testing, but RL-17 will bite you! My QL program is on the way, as my 'experience' amounted to NOTHING with RL-17.
Good shooting, and thanks for your report and warnings -- they are well founded.
Jim Hardy