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It's difficult to rate a 2 0r 3 shot group. When you are getting close, do 5 shot groups and when you thing you have it, do a 10. Have a few extra rounds with you in case you pull a shot, just reshoot that particular one.
great info! super shooting. I only use CCI primers (?). lotta variables. Cool to see the amazing accuracy change.There are always so many threads about
"what powder to use with such and such cartridge" or "what bullets is best for this and that"
Although there seems to be some certain powders that do actually work quite well with certain rounds, I have always told folks to try as many powders and bullets as they can that will fit the rifle's application. This ensures the best accuracy is not accidentally overlooked.
It is well known to most folks that a primer change in a load can have a massive effect on accuracy as well and I have witnessed this many times personally in the past. But to be brutally honest with myself, I have always had a strong bias towards ONLY using Federal primers in my rifles. I have always carried many different primer brands on the shelf for testing just in case I couldnt find a load using Federal, but didnt use them extensively because Federal always worked out in the end.
Well I decided to start doing initial load testing a little different this time with my new 300 NMI hunting rifle. Just to put a spin on things if nothing else.
I loaded all the starting recipes like i normally would using Federal GM215M primers, but then I loaded another set of rounds with the same exact recipe save for changing the primer to a Remington 9 1/2 Magnum. The results were astonishing...
These are only 100 yard groups and only a couple I've tried so far, but the difference is night and day.
In the first photo, I probably would have completely dismissed playing with the 90gr charge of RL33 had I only tried the GM215M primer, but look what happened when all i did different was use a Rem 9 1/2M in the same recipe. The accuracy changed from about a 1.5+" group to a sub 1/4" group.
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I then fired another 3 shot confirmation group at a different target using the same recipe with the Rem 9 1/2M to ensure the first group wasnt a fluke. I think this group was even smaller.
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The next test was using the same two primers in a load using an identical charge of N570. In this instance, the GM215M performed better. The difference wasnt as drastic, but most definitely noticeable on the paper.
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I suppose the point of the topic is to recommend people pay as much attention to testing different primers in a load as they would any other component. As this test confirmed (along with my other past experiences), a primer change can have a massive effect on how a rifle shoots. The primer changes shown above took bad groups and gave them acceptable accuracy. So where I normally may have moved on to the next load due to poor accuracy, the differences made me stop and think, "wait a second, I DO have something to really work with using this powder".
Ledd,
Hey, where are the pics of the new rifle? This thread can't be complete without them!! Looks like you are off to a great start. Looking forward to more results.
Paul
There have been some studies on impact/performance of sifferent primers.
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com...tested-for-velocity-essd-group-size-and-more/
This is a great article that someone did their homework and analysis on over a dozen popular primers.
http://www.targetshooter.co.uk/?p=2662
I normally use Federal 205's and 205M's in my all of my SR bench 30BR rifles. A friend of mine shot this caliber called a 30 Jaguar, (a modified 30x47 with a radiused shoulder similar to the double radiused Weatherby shoulder) which at the time he had to modify 308 Lapua brass because there was no such thing as a 6.5x47 Lapua case. He did really well with that cartridge earning 3 straight IBS score shooter of the year titles in 2000, 2001, and 2002. Fast forward to around 2010, Sid Goodling took the original Jaguar case and changed a few things that he thought would work better and he called it the 30 Jag II. I ended up having Sid chamber me a barrel for it in 2016 for that upcoming season. Well I started out using a 43.5 dose of N133 with a Federal 205M primer. No matter what I did it would shoot in the 2's and 3's all the time, not good. Made one change to a BR4 primer and bingo, consistent high zero's to low teens. The Federals didn't work worth a shit with that big a dose of 133. Went back and loaded some cases with the Federal's again and same outcome 2's and 3's. Loaded some back up with the BR4's and back to high zero's and low teens. Just goes to show you what one little change can do for your groups. Funny thing is I never had luck with BR4's in my 30BR. The Federal's always made smaller groups with the H4198 or N130 that I use.