Unfortunately we are not blessed with accessible ranges back home and I had to to compromise. The wind will blow, calm day's are rare. The target and development is what I have for now, based on Eric's method I am keen to learn the way forward?
From what I see, 42.5 is the upper edge of the node on all three targets. 42 grains and 42.5 grains group together on all three targets.Last season my rifle was shooting very well, but this season, I have been having trouble. So decided to do a new load development. In the process of putting the loads together, I decided to do the development with three different conditions.
Condition 1 (Ref: 22-337-WIL), 0.337" Neck Bushing, 0.002" Neck Tension and an Inline bullet seating die
Condition 2 (Ref: 3-338-WIL), 0.338" Neck Bushing, 0.001" Neck Tension and an Inline bullet seating die
Condition 3 (Ref: 3-338-RED), 0.338" Neck Bushing, 0.001" Neck Tension and Redding Comp seating die
This is a .308 Win, 30" 1:10 twist Benchmark barrel, Berger 185gr Juggernauts, Varget Powder, Lapua Brass, CCI BR-2 Primers.
I think the desired node is in Condition 3, either the 42.5gr or 44.0gr. But would really like your help in confirming this.
Interesting how much the neck tension affected the consistency of rounds between Condition 1 & 2.
Thanks very much for the help.
Condition 1:
View attachment 1110987
Condition 2:
View attachment 1110988
Condition 3:
View attachment 1110989
I would say 44.2 is the middle of the node. Play with seating depth a couple of thousands either way. Watch temperature and load up or down accordingly. I think 2750-2760 FPS is where you were before and is where juggs tend to tune in.Last season my rifle was shooting very well, but this season, I have been having trouble. So decided to do a new load development. In the process of putting the loads together, I decided to do the development with three different conditions.
Condition 1 (Ref: 22-337-WIL), 0.337" Neck Bushing, 0.002" Neck Tension and an Inline bullet seating die
Condition 2 (Ref: 3-338-WIL), 0.338" Neck Bushing, 0.001" Neck Tension and an Inline bullet seating die
Condition 3 (Ref: 3-338-RED), 0.338" Neck Bushing, 0.001" Neck Tension and Redding Comp seating die
This is a .308 Win, 30" 1:10 twist Benchmark barrel, Berger 185gr Juggernauts, Varget Powder, Lapua Brass, CCI BR-2 Primers.
I think the desired node is in Condition 3, either the 42.5gr or 44.0gr. But would really like your help in confirming this.
Interesting how much the neck tension affected the consistency of rounds between Condition 1 & 2.
Thanks very much for the help.
Condition 1:
View attachment 1110987
Condition 2:
View attachment 1110988
Condition 3:
View attachment 1110989
@Fullbore, looks like your testing is over a very large range of powder and speeds. I might suggest you look up a known powder, primer, bullet combo and tighten up the test range. You might have 3 different nodes within the 250 fps range you covered.?.? Also, if you have less than 200 rounds down the barrel you might not see great results with this test yet. Barrel needs to settle in.I am interested in some info on Fullbore's test. Where would his accuracy node be ?
@Fullbore, looks like your testing is over a very large range of powder and speeds. I might suggest you look up a known powder, primer, bullet combo and tighten up the test range. You might have 3 different nodes within the 250 fps range you covered.?.? Also, if you have less than 200 rounds down the barrel you might not see great results with this test yet. Barrel needs to settle in.
@rebs 23 grains.Gday Everyone
Just did some load testing at 100yds with my Tikka T3x varmint 223 1:8 twist.
Shooting 80gr sierra matchkings and 2208 (Varget in USA)
Seated 0.010" off lands
Heres the results.
Chrony numbers are:
22.1 Avg 2553 ES 43
22.4 Avg 2581 ES 15
22.7 Avg 2647 ES 12
23 Avg 2671 ES 49
23.3 Avg 2707 ES 44
23.6 Avg 2747 ES 15
23.9 Avg 2787 ES 24View attachment 1110356
Agree. Note 47.0 might be near the low end of a node, as 47.5 has the same vertical displacement., but 46.5 is higher.
You are probably right, it would be much easier to tell if shooters organized thier OCW's like this:Agree. Note 47.0 might be near the low end of a node, as 47.5 has the same vertical displacement., but 46.5 is higher.
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Agree. Note 47.0 might be near the low end of a node, as 47.5 has the same vertical displacement., but 46.5 is higher.
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Condition 1:
View attachment 1110987