Here is my example of this process sucessfully working. Though I will admit, I did skip corners on the seating depth testing, only because I have had epxperience in using VLD's for a few calibers and have two seating depths that generally work well with them. I also dont have access to a reliable chronograph, so omitted that process as well. No point chasing your tail if you dont have an accurate chrony... I also have a large tuner on my rifle and that was set at 0 until all testing was finished.
So first off is testing powder charge. This case is the 284 shehane using a 180gr berger vld in a krieger 8.5 twist 5r barrel that I have been having trouble with for a while. Finally sorted my problem and had it rechambered ready to go.
I started with what I knew would be safe- 55.6gr powder- and since I knew a little about the VLD bullets and where they like seating wise, I chose a 10 thou jam. I went up in powder 0.2gr at a time as I knew I would see something fairly quickly. Sure enough 56 and 56.2 shot about the same POI. Excuse the damage to the paper, I stupidly had the target set up on a steel fence post.
Since 56 and 56.2gr were about the same POI, I really wanted to see 56.4gr shoot about the same as well- it would prove to me that I had a clear node that was large enough to have some room to move. Sure enough, another powder charge test and I was able to confirm it.
So 56.2 was going to be the middle charge to test. Quite possibly I could have gone higher but I was happy with the results so far.
So now was seating depth. Like I said, Ive used VLD's in a few different cals before and found them to work best at either 10 thou past touching, or around a 40 thou jump. In hindsight a better test would have been a 4, 7, 10, 13 and 15 thou jam or a 34, 37, 40, 43 and 46 thou jump. But I went straight to the depths I knew, plus 5 thou jam and 25 thou jump. Sometimes I have seen success with less of a jump and jam. In this again I was looking for similar POI's and the jumped loads showed more consistency in that for me. Take no notice of the powder charge written on the middle of the paper- Im definitely using 56.2gr.
Things were definitely looking good, and I was ready for the next stage of testing at our local range. We had a 300m f class shoot scheduled on electronic targets and it would be a great way to see how the tuner adjustments changed group size. Here are the photos.
Zero
Two
Four
Six
Eight- I did adjust my scope for this one (cant remember why)
After all this I turned the tuner back to 4 and left it there. The following weekend we had an 800m F class shoot planned and it would be good to see if the gun could hold its performance. We had a fairly switchy front fish tail wind which I knew wouldnt hold a very good waterline. It held about 1/4MOA at 300m when it was fairly light winds but would it at least be competitive?
As you can see it held about 3/4MOA which Im very happy with considering the conditions. My other 6.5mm barrel for this rifle holds fantastic waterline and I screwed it in to see what it did in the head wind conditions, and it shot the same scores, just not as good an X count as the 284 shehane that I was testing. I put that down to the BC advantage of the larger caliber. One of these shots out at 3 oclock is a sighter and all up it scored a 60.7X from 10 shots. Our scoring system is 6 points maximum per shot but would have been the equivalent of 100.7 for 10 shots in the USA.
I have decided that I will not be using any other method of load development in the future. This method clearly has the results to back it up. The only other thing I want to do is put the magnetospeed on it to see the velocity and ES. But in F class accuracy matters and I dont expect to be changing loads at all.