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JLOW; I have a pair of 1-7 tw Krieger DCM Heavy contour barrels. One shoots very well with the 77 smk (and Berger 72) with N140, while the other favors the Nosler 77 Custom Competition with RL15 after sorting the bullets by base to ogive and weight. Neither barrel does appreciably better with anything lighter than the 72's.
LAZER: As Kodiak mentioned, your 1-8 tw. barrel is fast enough to stabilize the 69's. That does not mean your barrel will favor them over lighter bullets. There is also no fear of over stabilization as it relates to accuracy unless shooting a cheap bullet at hyper velocities. You will lose a bit of velocity but shooting accurately can trump a minor velocity loss - depending on which you prefer. I too believe that the flat base bullets will perform best at the shorter distances and are easier to find a good load with. I do find that the 50 grain Hornady V-Max bullets to be exceptionally accurate for what I think to be a VERY reasonably priced bullet for the performance they give for informal target shooting and varminting. I'd use the Bergers or SMK's for more serious work. Custom bullets are nice too. You can buy the V-Max bullets in 500-round boxes packaged as "Z-Max" bullets for around $60.00 for 500. Right out of the box, they are capable of shooting sub 1/4" 5-shot groups if your rifle likes them. All of my rifles like them to some level - the worst putting them into 1/3" in no-wind conditions (all 100 yds.) They have a slight boat-tail and good
BC's for their weight. Here are a few loads that work in all of my rifles to some degree of good;
Win. brass, Rem 7 1/2 primer, 25.8 Varget, 50 or 52
grn. V-Max, 2.250" o.a.l. 3,150 f.p.s. from a bolt gun
Lake City brass, Remington 7 1/2 primer, 52 grn.
moly-coated Bergers, 23.8 IMR 8208 XBR
(informal target load) Lapua brass, 52 Bergers (bare), 24.0 IMR 8208 XBR,
Federal Match primer, bolt gun
(super varmint load) Lake City brass, 50 grn. Z-Max, 23.0 Reloader 7,
Federal Match primer, 3,226 f.p.s. from bolt gun
69 smk's with 23.5 Varget, Win. cases, Fed primer
I assemble a lot of A/R's for friends for serious varminting and I now just shoot a few groups of each of these loads through the rifle and one will always shoot very well. I do use either Remington 7 1/2 or Federal A/R match primers in all loads for use in the A/R's. Natchez shooters supply has both in stock as of this morning. Go to Brassmanbrass.com for unfired lake City cases for A/R's. Had them in stock as of last week. Lastly, if shooting bullets under 50 grains, try using Accurate Lt-32 powder as is dynamite in these .223's! Be sure to work up to these loads, starting about 1 1/2 grains lower than shown, increasing 3/10ths at a time max.! While not hot in the rifles I have shot them in - they could be in yours! Hope this helps. have fun!
LAZER: As Kodiak mentioned, your 1-8 tw. barrel is fast enough to stabilize the 69's. That does not mean your barrel will favor them over lighter bullets. There is also no fear of over stabilization as it relates to accuracy unless shooting a cheap bullet at hyper velocities. You will lose a bit of velocity but shooting accurately can trump a minor velocity loss - depending on which you prefer. I too believe that the flat base bullets will perform best at the shorter distances and are easier to find a good load with. I do find that the 50 grain Hornady V-Max bullets to be exceptionally accurate for what I think to be a VERY reasonably priced bullet for the performance they give for informal target shooting and varminting. I'd use the Bergers or SMK's for more serious work. Custom bullets are nice too. You can buy the V-Max bullets in 500-round boxes packaged as "Z-Max" bullets for around $60.00 for 500. Right out of the box, they are capable of shooting sub 1/4" 5-shot groups if your rifle likes them. All of my rifles like them to some level - the worst putting them into 1/3" in no-wind conditions (all 100 yds.) They have a slight boat-tail and good
BC's for their weight. Here are a few loads that work in all of my rifles to some degree of good;
Win. brass, Rem 7 1/2 primer, 25.8 Varget, 50 or 52
grn. V-Max, 2.250" o.a.l. 3,150 f.p.s. from a bolt gun
Lake City brass, Remington 7 1/2 primer, 52 grn.
moly-coated Bergers, 23.8 IMR 8208 XBR
(informal target load) Lapua brass, 52 Bergers (bare), 24.0 IMR 8208 XBR,
Federal Match primer, bolt gun
(super varmint load) Lake City brass, 50 grn. Z-Max, 23.0 Reloader 7,
Federal Match primer, 3,226 f.p.s. from bolt gun
69 smk's with 23.5 Varget, Win. cases, Fed primer
I assemble a lot of A/R's for friends for serious varminting and I now just shoot a few groups of each of these loads through the rifle and one will always shoot very well. I do use either Remington 7 1/2 or Federal A/R match primers in all loads for use in the A/R's. Natchez shooters supply has both in stock as of this morning. Go to Brassmanbrass.com for unfired lake City cases for A/R's. Had them in stock as of last week. Lastly, if shooting bullets under 50 grains, try using Accurate Lt-32 powder as is dynamite in these .223's! Be sure to work up to these loads, starting about 1 1/2 grains lower than shown, increasing 3/10ths at a time max.! While not hot in the rifles I have shot them in - they could be in yours! Hope this helps. have fun!









