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Whatever works best in the load you have developed. Some primers work better than others that's why you should have a good amount of different primers to experiment with.What has worked well for you so far?
And it does vary lot to lot. I found CCI 450 to be more accurate than BR4
, but slower.
The key is lot to lot differences.I'm surprised with the lower velocity, CCI 450 is supposed to be SRP-Magnum, while BR4 is the same as 400 - only better QC. Some say 450 offered better consistency at lower cost than BR4, IMHO - I believe that was just a good lot but several reported same conclusions. I saw a report someone posted about using different primers, with one exception CCI was better; CCI 400 was slightly better than BR4 and velocity was nearly the same. Go figure.
I was under the impression that BR4s are closer in dimension and performance to 450s than 400s.I'm surprised with the lower velocity, CCI 450 is supposed to be SRP-Magnum, while BR4 is the same as 400 - only better QC. Some say 450 offered better consistency at lower cost than BR4, IMHO - I believe that was just a good lot but several reported same conclusions. I saw a report someone posted about using different primers, with one exception CCI was better; CCI 400 was slightly better than BR4 and velocity was nearly the same. Go figure.
Dimensions - yes. Brisance - no.I was under the impression that BR4s are closer in dimension and performance to 450s than 400s.
This is the report I recently found. Only 4 shots each, butI'm surprised with the lower velocity, CCI 450 is supposed to be SRP-Magnum, while BR4 is the same as 400 - only better QC. Some say 450 offered better consistency at lower cost than BR4, IMHO - I believe that was just a good lot but several reported same conclusions. I saw a report someone posted about using different primers, with one exception CCI was better; CCI 400 was slightly better than BR4 and velocity was nearly the same. Go figure.
Primer Brand | Group Size | Velocity | Extreme Spread | Std Deviation |
Remington | 7.51.985″ | 2955 FPS | 8 FPS | 4.0 FPS |
Federal 205M | 2.200″ | 2951 FPS | 11 FPS | 4.8 FPS |
Sellier Bellot SR | 1.673″ | 2950 FPS | 14 FPS | 5.9 FPS |
CCI 450M | 2.341″ | 2947 FPS | 14 FPS | 6.6 FPS |
CCI 400 | 1.253″ | 2950 FPS | 3 FPS | 1.3 FPS |
CCI BR4 | 1.275″ | 2949 FPS | 15 FPS | 6.9 FPS |
450’sWhat is your preference in primers for 223 benchrest shooting matches at 300 yds with Varget powder, CCI BR4 or Federal gold medal match 205M?
I'd use whichever one gives you a measurable difference in improvement. They are both up to the job. Sometimes, that can be hard to see on just a few groups, though, especially if you do minimal brass prep. Those "smaller" cartridges can tend to throw out some pretty crazy ES's without anal brass prep. But within 300 yards, it doesn't always equate to less accuracy as much as might be expected. The heavier the bullet and the hotter the load, the more I might be inclined towards the 450's - but the Federal Gold Medal Match can trump all in terms of accuracy as often as not. The difference in velocity with that load would not likely exceed 40 FPS one way or the other between the two primers in the .223. Sometimes the difference is just enough to put you into a better node or maybe pull you to the outer edge of what was a good one.What is your preference in primers for 223 benchrest shooting matches at 300 yds with Varget powder, CCI BR4 or Federal gold medal match 205M?
While you may have been quoted something true by CCI, the results in my barrels is what I’m talking about. Running them in my .308 and 6.5 Creedmoor, ES and MV are nearly identical between the 450 and the BR-4. The 400, ES and SD are larger, but MV is down about 15 fps with the same powder charge. I don’t know about measured ignition rates because I do not have the ability to test that, but I can use a chronograph.Dimensions - yes. Brisance - no.
Very similar to CCI’s standard small primer (CCI 400), but with a slightly thicker cup (.025″ instead of .020″) and stamped “Benchrest” to indicate it is “match quality.”
Per 4/17/2023 email from Cody B., CCI Technical Service Representative – “The CCI BR4 have an equivalent ignition rate to a CCI 400.”
I wish CCI would have left posted the info on their primers like they had years ago.
I don't disagree, truth is downrange at the target with 'that' firearm. That posted report just threw out what I thought I knew when I looked at the CCI velocities and ED/SD.While you may have been quoted something true by CCI, the results in my barrels is what I’m talking about. Running them in my .308 and 6.5 Creedmoor, ES and MV are nearly identical between the 450 and the BR-4. The 400, ES and SD are larger, but MV is down about 15 fps with the same powder charge. I don’t know about measured ignition rates because I do not have the ability to test that, but I can use a chronograph.