XTR
F-TR obssessed shooting junkie
Something that has occurred to me since what I will call the end of the 2013 competition shooting season (yes I know people are still shooting in AZ, but for the rest of us it's f'n freezing and there are deer to be shot)
Is it really worthwhile to search out long barrel slow powder combinations for a bit more MV, or are you really wasting your time? At least with a 308 in F-TR, no matter what you do you probably can't reach the next node above the one that you can get to with a 30" tube, now maybe running a 32 you can get to the sweet spot with a little less powder and a little better brass life, but are you going to be able to get to something that pays a performance dividend in the wind? I am beginning to think not so much.
Case in point, for me. This yr I've experimented with a barrel up to 34" long at one point. Shooting 185s you really run out of powder before you get to the end of that. At one point I chronoed side by side same load, same bullet, chambers cut with the same reamer, and running 44.5gr of Varget the 34" was 40FPS slower than my 30" (both Krieger 1:10s). Even at 32" running slower powders I am able to achieve MVs in the mid 2800s with the 185s, but I'm finding that the accuracy is inconsistent. Looking back it seems that the load may be running right at the top of the node, and if the temperature got up the velocity seemed to get into a scatter node and my scores fell to pieces. (assuming the whole node theory is accurate)
Everything I've seen, read and heard says that with the 185 Bergers that the magic number is in the mid 2700s to maybe the low 2800s but you probably need to stop there. I'm not sure where the next node might be, but if it's up in the 2900FPS range then I don't see getting there with a load that is a) safe, b) allows use of brass more than once.
I've experimented with some other bullets, but not enough to put up any thoughts with data to back it up. Is there anything to this idea or am I missing something?
Has anyone got any experience with the 185s or other bullets one way or the other?
Is it really worthwhile to search out long barrel slow powder combinations for a bit more MV, or are you really wasting your time? At least with a 308 in F-TR, no matter what you do you probably can't reach the next node above the one that you can get to with a 30" tube, now maybe running a 32 you can get to the sweet spot with a little less powder and a little better brass life, but are you going to be able to get to something that pays a performance dividend in the wind? I am beginning to think not so much.
Case in point, for me. This yr I've experimented with a barrel up to 34" long at one point. Shooting 185s you really run out of powder before you get to the end of that. At one point I chronoed side by side same load, same bullet, chambers cut with the same reamer, and running 44.5gr of Varget the 34" was 40FPS slower than my 30" (both Krieger 1:10s). Even at 32" running slower powders I am able to achieve MVs in the mid 2800s with the 185s, but I'm finding that the accuracy is inconsistent. Looking back it seems that the load may be running right at the top of the node, and if the temperature got up the velocity seemed to get into a scatter node and my scores fell to pieces. (assuming the whole node theory is accurate)
Everything I've seen, read and heard says that with the 185 Bergers that the magic number is in the mid 2700s to maybe the low 2800s but you probably need to stop there. I'm not sure where the next node might be, but if it's up in the 2900FPS range then I don't see getting there with a load that is a) safe, b) allows use of brass more than once.
I've experimented with some other bullets, but not enough to put up any thoughts with data to back it up. Is there anything to this idea or am I missing something?
Has anyone got any experience with the 185s or other bullets one way or the other?