Bart B. said:
Stool, thanks for your comment on my post.
I was one of the former Palma Team members that helped work up that load for Sierra's 155's. We used new cases about 170-grains in weight, Fed 210M primers, several powders and the bullet seated to an OAL of 2.80". Six of us tested our loads with 20-shot groups at 1000 yards.
Several loads were sent to a lab for testing. Best muzzle velocity, peak pressure and powder charge weight uniformity was with AA2520 ball powder. It also produced the worst accuracy. Best accuracy was with IMR4895 but with average numbers for muzzle velocity, peak pressure and powder charge weight. The load used for the matches was 45.3 grains of it.
Winchester had to retool the production line 3 times to get uniformity of the cases to the specs we wanted; they were probably the most uniform cases made since the famous WCC58 and WCC60 match cases from the plant in Illion, IL.
Those Lapua 185's that shot so darned accurate were spun at 30,000 rpm testing them for balance. Those way unbalanced flew out of the collet chucked up in a Dremel Moto Tool and bounced off the walls. But a couple hundred out of several hundred tested were perfect.
Bart B, this is one of you post on same subject from another forum
I was one of the Palma Team members that developed the load in early 1991 those Winchester cases were made for Sierra's prototype 155's they sent us to test with. We developed loads to test with cases weighing between 165 and 170 grains. I weighed about 50 random samples of the 92 PALMA ones I got from the first match that ammo was used in the summer of 1991. Weight spread was 1.5 grains; excellent by any means. Mid told me back in the early 1970's that a 1% spread in case weight's good enough. That's the only case "prep" he's ever done; no flash hole or pocket reaming. Sometimes he would turn necks if they had more than a .001" spread in wall thickness.
I bunked with Bob Jensen in South Africa in the late 1990's for their Nationals and we talked one night about those 92 PALMA headstamped cases. The Western Cartridge Company plant in Illinois had to try 3 or 4 sets of case forming dies for the coin, cup, draw, head and trim processes to make them from cartridge brass sheets. Those cases were a little better than the great WCC58 and WCC60 match cases made there for the US Olympic Free Rifle Team in those years. Having many hundreds of each and weighed some of them, they were 1.8 to 2.1 grains for spread.
In a phone chat with WCC's production engineer in 1991 about those cases, he said that someone had asked about using those old dies they still have stored away for the 92 PALMA run. But WCC denied as the WCC58's averaged 150 grains and the WCC60 156; too thin for safety in the 1990's 'cause so many people loaded ammo way too hot. Which is why the 92 PALMA ones averaged about 169 grains.
That ammo shot about 1/2 MOA at worst in several rifles from around the world in the first match it was used in; 1991 Rocky Mountain Palma Matches at the NRA range at the Whittington Center, Raton, NM. A year later at the 1992 World Palma Matches held there, top long range competitors from all over said it was the most accurate batch of ammo they had ever shot. At a dinner on night during that event with Bob, Mid and others, one conversation was about how so many folks waste lots of time measuring stuff that doesn't matter trying to get the best accuracy. Case weight spread of 1% is good enough.
This is little about Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen - Paradise Valley, ArizonaI think it's safe to say that Bob Jensen has loaded more .308 ammunition for Palma shooting than any other person I'm aware of. Bob, of course, loaded over 300,000 rounds for the 1992 Palma Match, ammunition that was used by competitors from all nations; and before that, he loaded 98,000 rounds for the US Army Marksmanship Unit.
I got the above from here also one of our posters
http://riflemansjournal.blogspot.com/2010/01/reloading-western-shooters-pet-loads.html
From my understand which you left out Bob Jensen tested 92 Palma ammo on a machine rest.