So I have been working on getting one of my 22 Dashers to shoot and have had some pretty good luck. It consistently shoots 1/2 MOA out to 600 yards, with the best 5 shot group of 2.1". I am happy with this but I feel the rifle can do better. I worked up my loads using Erik C's method and felt like it did a great job, but I want more. I just don't know how to get to the next level without going overboard. I only shoot off a harris bipod and a small wedge sand bag in the rear. Any thoughts or ideas would be greatly appreciated. i.e. neck turing, annealing, sorting, etc??
Rifle Specs: Rem 40x, 28" Krieger 8 Twist, 22 Dasher, .254 Neck, shooting 75 grn A-maxs with a .010 jump.
Reloading steps: De-prime brass, clean in SS tumbler, bump shoulders back .002 and neck size, trim to same length, chamfer, polish, and load'em up.
Concerns are: My brass has three firings on them now. When I seat the bullets they have a varying amount of force required to seat them. I would assume this can be controlled by annealing. Anyways, let me know what you guys would do next and why?
Thanks!
Rifle Specs: Rem 40x, 28" Krieger 8 Twist, 22 Dasher, .254 Neck, shooting 75 grn A-maxs with a .010 jump.
Reloading steps: De-prime brass, clean in SS tumbler, bump shoulders back .002 and neck size, trim to same length, chamfer, polish, and load'em up.
Concerns are: My brass has three firings on them now. When I seat the bullets they have a varying amount of force required to seat them. I would assume this can be controlled by annealing. Anyways, let me know what you guys would do next and why?
Thanks!