WayneShaw said:Bruno's sells bullets too I think.
I agreeBoydAllen said:Every single person that I have helped get started loading for their first 6PPC, I have started with 68 grain Bergers, and they have all shot as well with them as I would expect with any bullet. With a excellent rifles, properly tuned loads, and ideal conditions, five shots under.2, certainly not all the time, certainly not"all day long" , but enough to let you know that if it is a .2, that it was probably you, and not the bullet. People have an affinity for the exotic and hard to get. That is the only problem that Bergers have; they are (usually) easy to get, so the harder to get stuff must be better.
Great adviseBoydAllen said:Pick one bullet, and learn how to do a proper, loading at the range workup. Working with too many bullets usually means that you will not do a good investigation of any of them, and you will use up a significant percentage of your barrels limited top accuracy life in the process. Recently a friend has been getting top results with the columns .005 off of carefully measured touch. I would start a one shot per load pressure test at 27 grains, with .3 steps, over flags, on the same target, holding center, and stop when the bolt got a little tight on FL sized loads. From there you will probably have evidence of a minimum of two nodes that you can explore. I think that LT 32 may favor the lighter bullets, with a little jump. With 133 you might try around 28.8 with the bullet and seating depth that I mentioned. If you have a chronograph I would suggest doing all your testing with it. Let us know of your results.