In "The Book of Rifle Accuracy" Tony explains a load development process for the 6PPC where you find the "jam" point for a particular bullet and neck tension, and then progressively seat the bullet farther and farther away from the jam point.
My question is, is this a good development process for other calibers as well such as the 6mmBR?
The reason I'm asking is my 13.5 twist 6mmBR is not shooting worth a darn any more. Groups used to always be in the .2s and 3s with an occasional group in the 1s. Now I'm getting groups in the 3s, 4s and some even in the 5s. I only have about 1,200 rounds down the barrel. Could the barrel be worn out this soon?
Another detail worth noting is the spread is showing up as vertical stringing. There is little to no horizonal dispersion. I'm shooting a load of 30 grains of N133, 70 grains SMKs, loaded about .003 into the lands. This has been my standard load from the very beginning that has shot very well. Could this load now be out of tune? (Already checked scope screws....everything else is exactly the same as before.)
If the load is out of tune, I'm thinking of starting over w/ N135 using Tony's load development process.
My question is, is this a good development process for other calibers as well such as the 6mmBR?
The reason I'm asking is my 13.5 twist 6mmBR is not shooting worth a darn any more. Groups used to always be in the .2s and 3s with an occasional group in the 1s. Now I'm getting groups in the 3s, 4s and some even in the 5s. I only have about 1,200 rounds down the barrel. Could the barrel be worn out this soon?
Another detail worth noting is the spread is showing up as vertical stringing. There is little to no horizonal dispersion. I'm shooting a load of 30 grains of N133, 70 grains SMKs, loaded about .003 into the lands. This has been my standard load from the very beginning that has shot very well. Could this load now be out of tune? (Already checked scope screws....everything else is exactly the same as before.)
If the load is out of tune, I'm thinking of starting over w/ N135 using Tony's load development process.









