I Understand.At Deep Creek we are working in the pits quite a bit , I would have to be part ninja to get ammunition loaded in time.
I Understand.At Deep Creek we are working in the pits quite a bit , I would have to be part ninja to get ammunition loaded in time.
If by “Satterlee method” you mean loading one round per charge weight and looking for flat spots in the velocity graph, that is pure utter horseshit and you are only ever going to see random noise, and the results won’t replicate. You may as well use a Ouija board to pick your charge weights. Scott Satterlee doesn’t teach that anymore, by the way.
In general terms yes. In short range especially if the wind isn’t howling you need a perfectly tuned rifle all day. To do that you have to chase the load.I'm thinking you mean the need to change powder charges bcuz of velocity changes due to temp changes ... ?
I like the concept of groups with a large number of shots. I use a similar method when cold bore sighting very thin barreled hunting rifle. Shoot a target with 3 rounds shoot 3 times each time over 15 to 20 range trips. Then I know how a load the regularly performs in a cold barrel .Absolutely no offense to anyone, but a single 3-5 shot group doesn't say anything. Show 60 shots.
Yes, @Tarmacshooter is a troll.
I guess I fit into the engineer mold. My son and I both have 30-06 and 8MM JS Mausers. I work loads for each caliber that work in both rifles. I have varmint rifles that are better than 1/2" shooters, I have a 6MM auto loader that's a 1/2" shooter and a 45 caliber magnum rifle that shoots 3 shot 100 yard 1 ragged holes, (too much of a pussy to shoot 5 shots). What I do works for me in terms of repeatability.This reminds me of the joke about the scientist and the engineer....the first is looking for "the perfect" answer and the second for "fit for puprose" answer....I am an engineer...always look for fit for purpose
I am not a competivie shooter, just a hunter. Old enough to have been loading before Satterlie, Audette or OBT theories were published. I used tuners before OBT and at times when the peole who sell them now, argued against them.
My first load developent was with a variation of OCW. I have used varations of ladder (combined MV and Elevation changes). I used QuickLoad and GRT. I have a load my friend loaded in his rifle that shoots 5 shots, .5" or less in his rifle, tried it in 3 others, same caliber, same brand, different barrel contour, different muzle brake, different country of manufacture and same results. Took two of these rifles to Africa and was very successful.
To say the "ladder is useless" while millions of people find it effective, is wrong.
You can say "I have another way" would be more appropriate....and let peole and time be the judge
What I am trying to say is, there are many was to get to your target, some are faster than others, some are better than others, but so mane ways have worked for decades now. Use what works for you. I use what works for me. Don't need to convert anyone...but always listening to see if something else is better, in times of scarce resources.
Hey congrats on that, by the way. That’s a killer agg.In general terms yes. In short range especially if the wind isn’t howling you need a perfectly tuned rifle all day. To do that you have to chase the load.
My 3 Gun Agg at the IBS Nationals (last week) was a .2167. That’s fifteen 5 shot groups at 100yds and fifteen 5 shot groups at 200yds. That’s 150 record shots and it was good for 3rd place.
You shootin f-class or somethin?At Deep Creek we are working in the pits quite a bit , I would have to be part ninja to get ammunition loaded in time.
No I shoot OG BR, I’m too crippled to get up and down.You shootin f-class or somethin?
Yall need to hire a target crew. Too much work to do when shooting to mess with targetsNo I shoot OG BR, I’m too crippled to get up and down.
communication is part of the problem with this and many other threads.
i have shot once a year at deep creek since 2015. the guys at deep creek seldom do LOAD DEVELOPMENT for a 6mm 1000 yd rifle. they know most of the basic info, and just have to TUNE, sometime more than a little, to get a rifle to shoot. so IMHO, they tune, not LOAD DEVELPOPMENT.
i built a new 6 dasher and went to 15.5 from 15. i had to start from scratch, do a 20 shot/.2 step ladder, chart and plot and pick a couple of points to try with LOAD DEVELOPMENT then fine TUNE once i was close.
a real 20 shot ladder is a beginning tool of load development, not an end to load development.
a lot of people have missed the big picture
It's a fact, for ideal gases behaving ideally.PV = nRT is like gravity. It's not a theory, it's a fact, and difficult to overcome.
i know i said i was done, but i had not looked at his so called "original 1000 yard ladder test"
Personally, I find it incredible that you ignored load #8Load 10, 11 was selected as a candidate for best vertical dispersion
Load 17 was then selected as another candidate.
Load 17 won and was selected as the best load for this rifle/powder/bullet combo
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Your assumption of MV only changing 10fps over 40F is wrong. Pure and simple, it’s wrong. If you don’t believe me, shoot 10 rounds at 50F and the 10 more at 90F and if the difference is less than 10fps I’ll eat my shoe. Lol.From 25F to 140F, variance of 115F Delta MV is just 25fps
At 40F variance, the MV should not change more than 10fps or so.
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I would have selected it. However, the test is not mine, and I have no control over it.Personally, I find it incredible that you ignored load #8
It could be true for the powder you use. Make your own tests and seen how much MV delta there is. a +-15 fps is maybe like +-1 0.25 MOA at 1000 yardsYour assumption of MV only changing 10fps over 40F is wrong. Pure and simple, it’s wrong. If you don’t believe me, shoot 10 rounds at 50F and the 10 more at 90F and if the difference is less than 10fps I’ll eat my shoe. Lol.
I provided my explanation for flat spot on the MV vs charge weight curve.@Beiruty I believe your logic is pretty flawed. There are entirely to many variables at play from shot to shot. This is not an all things being equal scenario.
Variables from primer differences, brass differences, powder differences and bullet differences.
Very small variations in bullets will give different results.
The ladder method of tuning is the most popular form of tuning. It’s tried and trued. This gives you a window of accuracy across a lot of variables and wide margin of error for those variables.
Say what you want but there are FAR to many good shooters who use this method who have match wins.
This method can be used for tuning a hunting rifle, PRS rifle and Fclass rifle.
What you typed above makes zero sense and I refuse to participate in this frivolous conversation anymore. Your reply to my post in NO way is even remotely related to what I saidIt could be true for the powder you use. Make your own tests and seen how much MV delta there is. a +-15 fps is maybe like +-1 0.25 MOA at 1000 yards