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Thread: How do YOU work up a load?

  1. #16
    Member crnkin's Avatar
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    Give gun to abe

    Receive back

    Done

  2. #17
    Lovin Facebook for hunters kiwijames's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by crnkin View Post
    Give gun to abe

    Receive back

    Done
    Ha ha. Did I text you by mistake. I have lost patience and am time poor so this will probably happen.
    The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice. And because we fail to notice that we fail to notice, there is little we can do to change; until we notice how failing to notice shapes our thoughts and deeds

  3. #18
    R93
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    Shame you can't bring it down J.
    We could have a play at getting it sorted before we go.
    I have never had a load dramatically improve just by altering seating depth.
    Some barrels and projectiles just don't match eh.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk. So please forgive my sausage fingers!!!
    Do what ya want! Ya will anyway.

  4. #19
    OPCz Rushy's Avatar
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    The thread title poses the question "How do YOU work up a load"? The smart arsed answer I came up with cannot be printed here!
    veitnamcam and BRADS like this.
    It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
    What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
    Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
    Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
    Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
    Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
    Rule 5: Check your firing zone
    Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
    Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms

  5. #20
    Lovin Facebook for hunters kiwijames's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rushy View Post
    The thread title poses the question "How do YOU work up a load"? The smart arsed answer I came up with cannot be printed here!
    It was posted in the reloading section, not the curry eating section Rushy

  6. #21
    Member Savage1's Avatar
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    How do I work up a load? I don't, I just do a bit of research on what a good pill would be then take an average powder, seat to the lands, done.

    I hate shooting groups, to me they are irrelevant (to a point) as human error is always going to be far larger at long range than the accuracy of your rifle. Actually maybe it's because I'm lazy and don't have the attention to detail.

    I think some of my attitude come from NRA shooting, it's not the person with the most accurate rifle that wins, it's the old bugger that know how to read the wind.

  7. #22
    Member crnkin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kiwijames View Post
    Ha ha. Did I text you by mistake. I have lost patience and am time poor so this will probably happen.
    Dont think so?

    In all seriousness, I pick the ADI powder closest to 100% filling the case at max load (I don't worry about velocity one iota)

    Seat a hornady boolit to fit the mag, work up a load every .5g, 3g below and 2g above book max.

    Pick the best load, (unless I hit pressure early, which is almost never, in which case I change powder) and shoot.

    If I'm over the coast ill chuck it through abe's chrony which is pretty damn close, easily within +-100fps on a bad day, otherwise I shoot and check trajectory.

    Done.

    Might swap to bergers later in the year if Hornady keeps being in short supply, in which case a heavy VLD will do.

    Chris

  8. #23
    dog chaser distant stalker's Avatar
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    Tussoks post made me go and check how far my loads are from lands.
    168gr berger 7mm mag 120 thou
    162gr amax 7mm08 180 thou
    69gr berger 223 40 thou
    None showed any great improvement from touching. 708 is just mag length which conveniantly shoots well. Other 2 are mag fit but are lengths that showed best accuracy (huge difference with bergers)

  9. #24
    dog chaser distant stalker's Avatar
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    Whoops 69gr targex i mean

  10. #25
    Member crnkin's Avatar
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    hur hur 69

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tussock View Post
    I'm doing a new one in a few days.

    Will be .243, 105 Targex with N560 in Lapua brass and Fed 210 match primers.

    I will take 20 cases. Pity these cases. I want fired brass to work with, as fired vs unfired is pretty different sometimes I have found. I full length size everything.

    I will rummage around on the internet and find a starting load. If I can not find one, I typically graph a bunch of other cases, look at bore to capacity ratios etc, similar weights and see where the case and projectile I have chosen would fall on the line. Also I will look at how much lighter a starting load typically is for that type of powder. Or I will get the gimp to make me one in Quickload.
    I only want a genuine starting load. If you go too low you get gas back round the case or the mysterious low load blow up (real thing?).

    I don't speak "thou" so for a long time I seated everything 1mm off the lands. Thats where my 6.5x47Lapua is sitting, and it shoots pretty spectacularly. It is however 40 thou off the lands and it upsets the Gimp when he sees it on the wall in my loading room, so this time I may go .5mm as that seems more the done thing (20 thousands of an inch).

    I will load two rounds at 1.5g increments from the starting load and shoot them over the chrony. Im not seriously interested in starting loads, but I also do not want to discover the hard way I have one of those weird rifles that gives scary pressure signs at a starting load. Pressure signs or excessive velocity at this point and its going to the Smith.

    I once the velocity gets into the vicinity of where it "should" be, probably 2x 2 shot groups, I will switch to 3 shot groups and .5g increments. I will start looking for pressure signs. All the fuss about STRAIN gauges. Strain means deformed. Elastic strain is when it springs back to its original shape. This is what a strain gauge measures, and it assumes you know your metal properties, and their elasticity very very well. If you do, then you can convert the amount of stretch to a pounds per square inch (PSI) number. As in how much pressure would it take to stretch the action X much. If you do not know them perfectly, the number is non-sense.

    Permanent strain is when the item is permanently changed. This is what happens to your brass case. It gets deformed/strained and it stays in its new shape. You will hear people say that using "traditional" methods for identifying pressure signs is not quantitative and your will see things written like "you are just guessing". This shows a very poor understanding of what stress and strain actually do. A fancy strain gauge measures elastic strain of about one one millionth of a bees dick, in a tiny fraction of an instant. And it assumes you know the metal properties. Get that wrong and its nonsense, but how do you know its wrong?

    Probably look at the cases. A case is a perfectly respectable, quantitative strain gauge. Its as quantitative as the fancy stick on PSI one, it just wont give you a number. Your measuring relative, permanent strain. Which is ideal, because that is all you wanted to know anyway. A blown up action is a permanently strained action. So is a wrecked case. PSI numbers, by comparison tell you very very little.

    I measure the basses, and I load in 3 or 5 shot increments and come back to my shed and knock the primers out to check the primer pockets. Im a bit spoilt as my loading room is by my range and I can leave the rifle to cool right down while I load rounds and take all day. I polish the case base up and look hard for an ejector mark. I want to see no signs that I am permanently deforming the case base. To be honest in the past, I was more willing to abuse a case, but now I want them to last, and I care less about velocity. If I can find no signs of the case suffering but the primers are struggling I might switch to a harder primer (probably only relevant to the x47 and the small primered 08 case). Obviously sticky bolt lift is bad news. I would suggest (this is purely conjecture on my behalf but makes sense to me) that serious sticky bolt lift is the action/chamber starting to stretch excessively. It will stretch and expand slightly and spring back, the case definitely will not. So the chamber expands temporarily, then clamps down on the permanently deformed case, which expanded to fill the expanded chamber. You don't want to be regularly deforming your chamber, as this could lead to metal fatigue and BOOM. Plus its super annoying, especially if you have a remington, as you will have to take your rifle and stuck case to the smith in one hand and your bolt handle in the other.

    You brass is the weak link. As long as you are not permanently straining it, you will not be hurting anything else. Arguably, if your beating it up a bit with no sticky bolt lift, then you may be safe enough, I certainly know some people who are still alive who are constantly looking for stronger extractors and can count their firings from the number of ejector marks. I'm happy enough just getting a bigger gun or twisting the elevation turret a bit further.

    I log velocity the whole way, and look for where the gains in velocity per grain start to plateau. I still want to go as fast as I can without wrecking the case. Lucky for me almost everything I have loaded for has tightened up around here somewhere. Once I have a clear front runner from the three shot groups, I will load a few at that weight and .2g either side in 5 shot groups, look at the velocity spread and see if it tightens up. If it just does not look like its going that well, with velocity or group size, I will just start over with a different powder at this point before I mess with seating depth.

    Once I have a load I will load some more and do some dot shooting. Depending on how hot I went my 20 cases are probably looking pretty sad by now. I will keep them and use them as fouling rounds after a clean or lose them into circulation with the other cases where they can cause fliers for the next 2000 firings of my hundred cases.

    Attachment 9026

    Then I go out and cold shoot a single round semi regularly and log what happens.

    Then I find some other problem and spend 6 months trying to figure out how to fix it.
    wholly fuck!!! did you copy paste or type that up? that would of takin me weeks to put that amount up.

  12. #27
    By Popular Demand gimp's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tussock View Post
    I'm sticking with my nice easy millimeter.

    Bugger the Gimp (not literally) well you can if you want
    I like my easy .25mm


    And no-one is buggering me.

  13. #28
    R93
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    wholly fuck!!! did you copy paste or type that up? that would of takin me weeks to put that amount up.

    Considering you type with a rod attached to your helmet I do not doubt for a minute it would take you weeks
    veitnamcam likes this.
    Do what ya want! Ya will anyway.

  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by R93 View Post
    Considering you type with a rod attached to your helmet I dont doubt it would take you a month
    ba hah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
    Uplandstalker likes this.

  15. #30
    By Popular Demand gimp's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tussock View Post
    Like right now? I thought you were going to see Wildman?
    He's not my type.

 

 

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