Belton45
Silver $$ Contributor
20”Short barrel ? 2762 fps seems low using 44.9gr 8208 with a large primer.
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20”Short barrel ? 2762 fps seems low using 44.9gr 8208 with a large primer.
That velocity looks about right to me for a 20" barrel. . . with a COAL of 2.800.Lapua LRP, 210M, went from 44-44.9 today. 2762 was with the 44.9 load.
Just out of interest I ran your load through GRT (the compact version). Assuming: 20 inch barrel (bolt face to muzzle) 56 grain H2O case capacity, 2.005 case trim length, 2.800 COAL, 44.9 gr 8208 and 2762 fps - the highest OBT node before getting too close to max pressure is around 43.6gr 8208 for 2687 fps.
That’s wild!!! 43.6 was my best group… I had something odd between 43.6 & 44. Velocity dropped. Keep in mind I only shot these 4 per load but all the rest were increasing in velocity. These went flat.Just out of interest I ran your load through GRT (the compact version). Assuming: 20 inch barrel (bolt face to muzzle) 56 grain H2O case capacity, 2.005 case trim length, 2.800 COAL, 44.9 gr 8208 and 2762 fps - the highest OBT node before getting too close to max pressure is around 43.6gr 8208 for 2687 fps.
Might be worth trying next time out - but as always, believe the target...let us know if this helps reduce your ES and SD.
Shot again today and 43.6 was best group again. Seen the same velocity go flat again at same charge. This was 2nd firing on that brass and was FL sized with .002” shoulder push back. Was slightly warmer by about 5 degrees and velocity dropped just a bit. I assume case volume is more with fire formed brass and caused just slight velocity drop?That’s wild!!! 43.6 was my best group … I had something odd between 43.6 & 44. Velocity dropped. Keep in mind I only shot these 4 per load but all the rest were increasing in velocity. These went flat.
43.6 2706
44.0 2703
Let us know how it goes.Well I dug around and I did have a .306 mandrel and I had a .332 bushing. So loading up some with mandrel sized and will see if es&sd change.
Have you found a load that yields the group (dispersion of shots on target) that you need for your shooting discipline?
Thanks for the info. I have moved on from 8208 to N140 (I had some of that to try, also have about 6lbs of H4895….). I also ordered some expander mandrels to use for setting neck tension instead of using just neck bushing. Have had some ugly weather recently so have not had a chance to give new ideas a try.For what it's worth I am, among other things, a professional experimental scientist and data analyst and just a little bit of a fanatic about careful load development with the 308 being what I have worked on the most. Ignore SD, the probability that anyone here is creating a data set where SD is meaningful is almost zero. Just because your Chrono knows how to calculate it doesn't make it meaningful. If you need to understand that take a class on statistics. ES can be useful but it's just one of many things that you need to dial in. The further you are shooting the more important it becomes to minimize velocity spread to get tight groups. Let the target tell you what matters for what you are doing. Focus on good case prep and finding the right combo of powder charge and seating depth to get tight groups. Max velocity is not interesting, consistent velocity is. To really dial it in you need a precision scale. You said you have some H4895, that has outperformed ever other powder that I've worked with but it's rarely available so I stopped using it and switched to N150.