Is barrel length measured from muzzle to bolt face?
How?There is a learning curve but QuickLOAD has saved me a lot of money and time.
Probably because he can choose the powder that fill the case amount he wants He can see the case capacity and check then adjust the max pressure
He can put all powders made and look at the pressure and amount of fill
The biggest thing he can see pmax
And the p1
Then he can see how much of the barrel it takes to Get 95% off the speed
And the % if the powder is burning in the barrel and kill sketters
Primers and different lots of the powder can add another unknownKeep in mind the fact 10 barrels from different makers the same length chambered with the same reamer can have a 50 fps or more spread in average muzzle velocity with the same load. Your barrel probably ain't exactly the same as the ones Quickload's data is derived from.
Just when I start getting the 'warm and fuzzy" feeling that I'm onto a shortcut to the ultimate load, you guys wreck my buzz! LolPrimers and different lots of the powder can add another unknown
I originally thought like you in that postJust when I start getting the 'warm and fuzzy" feeling that I'm onto a shortcut to the ultimate load, you guys wreck my buzz! Lol
I like to think we were sharpening your knowledge and reasoning knives so you can cut the reloading mustard a little bit better.Just when I start getting the 'warm and fuzzy" feeling that I'm onto a shortcut to the ultimate load, you guys wreck my buzz! Lol
Most shooter don’t check case capacity when loadingQuickLoad doesn't show an OBT node, it produces a value called Barrel Time that represents how long the bullet is in the barrel and Barrel Time is equivalent to an OBT Node.
It's pretty obvious that the average shooter does not have the technology to produce lab grade data but if you use a little common sense you can produce valid reference information in regards to muzzle velocities, chamber max pressure, bullet base pressure along the the barrel's length, etc. Most people that think that QuickLoad doesn't work don't understand that all data is relative based on some standard and with QuickLoad you have to adjust that standard until you get a match with real world data from a chronograph or a pressure transducer. You can adjust the baseline assumptions (using the recommendations of the software's manual) to match the data from your measuring devices. Once you get a match between the predicted data and the true data then the software will allow you to make "what if" predictions that will be very close the real world. My predictions are usually within 25 FPS of my actual measured values, most often the software is low. Taking in to consideration that the accuracy of the typical commercial chronograph can is about plus or minus 7 FPS of the true bullet speed, then the actual bullet speed is some value within a 14 FPS range and comparing that to my results that are within a 25 FPS range I'd say that the software can produce pretty accurate results (all numbers based on a muzzle velocity of 2500 FPS).
Once you educate yourself on how to use the software you can save money and time developing loads because you can eliminate loads that you know wont work - pressure chamber too high, muzzle velocity way off from what you want, powder produces the wrong pressure/time curve, etc.
How is case capacity best measured for most precise volume numbers:Most shooter don’t check case capacity when loading
To me it’s the most important thing in reloading fo accuracy
I believe Quickload suggests using a fired case, before resizing, for cartridges over 30k pressure,How is case capacity best measured for most precise volume numbers:
I prefer the last one because all the cases have the same outside dimensions and their inside volume is not influenced by out of round case issues.
- New cases.
- Fired cases.
- Resized fired cases
- Resized fired cases full into the sizing die.