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r bose said:With 70-82g bullets you can use an 8 twist.
90's require at least a 7 TW. My first barrel was a 6.5 TW but I just bought a 7 TW replacement knowing I will be giving up about 5% of the 90's BC. (see bergers twist stability calculator)
Tozguy said:You can take Laurie's answer to the bank.
amlevin said:Tozguy said:You can take Laurie's answer to the bank.
I actually took it to Benchmark and they built me a new .223 barrel in "7 twist" along with only three grooves. It shoots fantastically with 73 gr to 90 gr bullets.
amlevin said:Tozguy said:You can take Laurie's answer to the bank.
I actually took it to Benchmark and they built me a new .223 barrel in "7 twist" along with only three grooves. It shoots fantastically with 73 gr to 90 gr bullets.
rmist said:amlevin said:Tozguy said:You can take Laurie's answer to the bank.
I actually took it to Benchmark and they built me a new .223 barrel in "7 twist" along with only three grooves. It shoots fantastically with 73 gr to 90 gr bullets.
What are your chamber dimensions? How long is the barrel?
Thanks again
Laurie said:r bose said:With 70-82g bullets you can use an 8 twist.
90's require at least a 7 TW. My first barrel was a 6.5 TW but I just bought a 7 TW replacement knowing I will be giving up about 5% of the 90's BC. (see bergers twist stability calculator)
I'm not at all convinced by this. First, the Miller formula is known to under-state the Sg for HPBT match or plastic tip bullets. In the case of very long for weight / calibre bullets where the top of the lead core is well below the bullet tip, it seriously underestimates the Sg value. As a practical example of this, the 0.308" 155gn Lapua Scenar was long the favourite handloaded match bullet in the UK in 'Target Rifle' over Viht N140 fired from Palma type rifles and loaded from 2,925 to 3,000 fps at most. It was, and still is, happily used in 1-13 inch twist barrels, and in the early days when 1-14s were still common, it worked at 1,000 yards in that twist too. Now, this bullet is very long for its class thanks to a huge void up front, and if the Miller rule applies, it's barely stabilised at all under standard conditions in the 14 twist, 1.01 at 2,950, but falls below 1.0 under colder conditions - and we Sir, do shoot all year round in the UK and even if it's not Montana or Wyoming, freezing or just above freezing is not unknown at Bisley which is also not much above sea level. So, at 32F, Sg falls to 0.95 and if it's high pressure anticyclonic conditions, you'd see a slightly lower value still.
Even in the 13 inch twist, which Miller says is sub-optimal, it's 1.09 Sg in winter, only 1.17 in standard conditions which will if true produce substantial BC degradation. Since we're talking 2,950 fps (and often much less because the tightwads who shoot TR here don't reckon a 308 barrel done if it's not the wrong side of 6,000 rounds), these bullets are invariably supersonic at 1,000 in all conditions and perform happily in both twist rates.
From my own experience of the 0.224" 90gn VLD at 2,910 fps in a 7 inch twist, I found that ballistic program range cards continually underestimated the required elevation additions (using a scope whose adjuster value accuracy had been verified) and that shot by shot windage settings compared favourably with 308/155 loads used at that time, that is getting on for 3,100 fps. In the US v Scotland FTR team match held at Blair Atholl in June 2011, the 223 was in the top half of the scores posted in the 1,100 yard stage and in an informal 1,200 yard practice (actually 1,224 yds) held a couple of days earlier, the cartridge held a less than 1-MOA elevation, actually nearer to half-MOA, for 9 out of 10 shots with one a half-MOA low in the group. (This same rifle and ammo shot 1,000 yard 4.8" 5-round groups in a 1,000 yard BR match shortly after being built.)
Holy smokes Laurie 2900 + fps your cases must be good for one firing ?
manitou