Is this true? Did QL tell you anything about OBT? In what field did it do so?QL 'told me' to lower powder charge 0.46gns to get back on the OBT and the velocity it should be.
This is the answer. Basically accuracy nodes refer to when a bullet exits the crown of the barrel. If the timing is bad i.e. when vibrations is at the crown, the flight of the bullet is disturbed, giving a wide group. If the vibration is at the chamber, the crown is least disturbed and as such the bullet is least affected giving a small group.Brakes do not contact the bullet, the inside diameter of the brake is .005" to .040" over the size of the bullet (depending on what the manufacturer thinks is most accurate and safe). Once the bullet no longer contacts the bore the barrel vibrations will not effect it's performance.
As Ned said, QuickLoad simply provides you with the time that the bullet is in the barrel (barrel time) and you can use that information to help tune the load so that the bullet leaves the muzzle around an OBT node.
I agree. GRT usually gets me close if not on the node. I tested this with a friends competition rifle in 222 rem. He was on a node and rifle shooting one hole. Took his data and input to GRT and calibrated the powder model. I ran the OBT and it calculated a node .1 gr off his current load. The devil is in the detailsI assume that most people understand that any simulation software will only provide us with approximations, that seems obvious to me. But since the software's approximation is repeatable we can use it as a marker to make adjustments from. It's not perfectly accurate but it's better than a SWAG (scientific, wild-assed guess).