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Thread: Test load temps

  1. #16
    Member sneeze's Avatar
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    If its not a top end chrony you are wasting your time. Same as this 10 shot theory. You might as well just pick a random powder charge.
    A lot of loads will give you an ES of 30-40 fps over three shots, so you take one random shot and try and use that to identitfy a node? its bollocks. If you want to use the plateau theory you need an accurate average speed and you cannot get that from one shot per load. Its internet bollocks,
    Did I mention its bollocks? well I think it is.
    "You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin

  2. #17
    Member gadgetman's Avatar
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    The issue I see with testing would be the temp of the rifle action, which would change the ammo temp fairly quickly with the relative masses involved.
    There are only three types of people in this world. Those that can count, and those that can't!

  3. #18
    Member sneeze's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gadgetman View Post
    The issue I see with testing would be the temp of the rifle action, which would change the ammo temp fairly quickly with the relative masses involved.
    Yes if Im testing for temp /velocity diferential its both the rifle and ammo at the required temp. I cant confirm if its anymore relevant but I think it is rules out another variable.
    I remember reading somewhere that it takes some time for temp change to alter the actual powder temp though.
    gadgetman likes this.
    "You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin

  4. #19
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    Chronograph is a crony beta master. So probably not the most accurate, 99.5% accurate if you belive the box

    I'm no expert and only trying to experiment and learn. Just putting up my results if people are interested.

    It might be all bollocks and jibberish but it does appear to have worked for me, 6 shots inside an inch and the 7th just outside, all over a backpack no rear bag so I imagine the shooting wasn't perfect. Im not saying that if I went and picked a random load and shot that it would shoot worse, maybe I'll try that next.

    To me the loading up 3 rounds at each powder level and shooting a group then going off the smallest group makes no more sense, as its plenty easy to bring in shooter error and when your comparing 3x sub inch groups you can end up kind of chasing your tail.

    I did note that the first shot was the slowest of the group but I don't think the chamber would have been hot enough after 1 shot to increase the temp of second round enough to make a difference.

  5. #20
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    There seams to be plenty of high end guns made and long range shooting done by guys on the forum, so I imagine that this has all been tested and the best ways have been sorted out. But to be honest thos guys don't seam to put up on you tube or here how they come up with there results so I'm only going off the information I can find.

    If some of the guys that are actually long range shooting have input that would be great, I'm curios as to if you account for various load temps? And how you do it, do you have multiple drop charts? Or does no one actually bother and just go for the mid ground?

    Also what is your load development process so far this thread we have one for the 10 shot method and one against?

    What sort of criteria do you have before you take for example a 800y shot on a deer ? Are you always able to hit 1/2moa no matter the temp or shooting position? Or if you hit 1moa is that enough. Are some of the shots just kind of afluke and we dont hear about all the misses?

    I can shoot great groups off a bench, but somtimes my field shooting is terrible. I am just curious, eperimenting and looking for input. I'm no where there yet I limit myself to about 3-350 but there's guys here that do out to 1000y on the regular.
    veitnamcam likes this.

  6. #21
    Member sneeze's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by rusl View Post
    Chronograph is a crony beta master. So probably not the most accurate, 99.5% accurate if you belive the box

    I'm no expert and only trying to experiment and learn. Just putting up my results if people are interested.

    It might be all bollocks and jibberish but it does appear to have worked for me, 6 shots inside an inch and the 7th just outside, all over a backpack no rear bag so I imagine the shooting wasn't perfect. Im not saying that if I went and picked a random load and shot that it would shoot worse, maybe I'll try that next.

    To me the loading up 3 rounds at each powder level and shooting a group then going off the smallest group makes no more sense, as its plenty easy to bring in shooter error and when your comparing 3x sub inch groups you can end up kind of chasing your tail.

    I did note that the first shot was the slowest of the group but I don't think the chamber would have been hot enough after 1 shot to increase the temp of second round enough to make a difference.
    Mate you are not looking at this subjectively. Its part of the human condition when you want something to work to then ignore basic principals to get the outcome you want.
    You are claiming here that "it seems to have worked " when you have no control group. Nothing at all to compare it to. Look at my earlier post. The 10 shot method relys on finding a plateau
    of velocity. To do this you need an accurate average velocity and you simply cant get that from one shot. Its statistically impossible. If you shoot 3 shot groups you will have a sample 3 times the size of one shot so it has some relevance. 5 shot groups even more.
    Here is an example from some loads I put past the labradar for a mate going up in 1/2 grain increments. Ill list the first shot from each 3 shot group then the second then the third. Each will represent what you might see if you only fire one shot for the 10 shot theory.
    First shot
    2744
    2805
    2840
    2905
    2968

    Second shot from each string
    2783
    2818
    2881
    2925
    2969

    Third shot
    2747
    2825
    2867
    2900
    3007

    Any combination of first second or third shot could make up the string for the 10 shot example. so its all just random .
    Now if I list the averages of each 3 shot group we see a fairly consistent increase of 50ish fps for every 1/2 grain added. No plateau at all.

    2758
    2816
    2863
    2912
    2981

    Ill try and get to some more of your questions latter but my dinner is getting cold
    veitnamcam, gadgetman and chainsaw like this.
    "You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by sneeze View Post
    Mate you are not looking at this subjectively. Its part of the human condition when you want something to work to then ignore basic principals to get the outcome you want.
    You are claiming here that "it seems to have worked " when you have no control group. Nothing at all to compare it to. Look at my earlier post. The 10 shot method relys on finding a plateau
    of velocity. To do this you need an accurate average velocity and you simply cant get that from one shot. Its statistically impossible. If you shoot 3 shot groups you will have a sample 3 times the size of one shot so it has some relevance. 5 shot groups even more.
    Here is an example from some loads I put past the labradar for a mate going up in 1/2 grain increments. Ill list the first shot from each 3 shot group then the second then the third. Each will represent what you might see if you only fire one shot for the 10 shot theory.
    First shot
    2744
    2805
    2840
    2905
    2968

    Second shot from each string
    2783
    2818
    2881
    2925
    2969

    Third shot
    2747
    2825
    2867
    2900
    3007

    Any combination of first second or third shot could make up the string for the 10 shot example. so its all just random .
    Now if I list the averages of each 3 shot group we see a fairly consistent increase of 50ish fps for every 1/2 grain added. No plateau at all.

    2758
    2816
    2863
    2912
    2981

    Ill try and get to some more of your questions latter but my dinner is getting cold
    Cheers for that.
    I can fully see what your saying, I am trying to look at it subjectively but I'm fairly new to it and every thing I know comes from books and the Internet. I have never had any one teach me about hunting or shooting, I'm fully self taught which is pretty scary really. I asked a couple of guys at my local deer stalkers about reloading when I first started and the response was "just load up at book max" and you'll be rite, got a funny look when I asked about full length sizing vs neck sizing so I gave up.

    I did come to the conclusion that you really needed to shoot at least 2 or 3 shots just to get an accurate reading as my chrono didn't even read one shot.

    Do you fire all your loads in one go? I find after about 15 -20 shots my focus is starting to fade and this is where I start to worry if groups are opening up because of me or the load.

    Sorry for all the questions but why do you think that one load is more accurate than another then? The velocity node thing made sense to my mind as that would have the lowest ES which should make the groups more repeatable, if there's no velocity flat spot why do you think that certain loads come out more accurate? I have heard of barrel vibrations or whip, I think that all ties in with getting the bullet to arrive at the muzzle in a certain sweet spot which I would imagine would be the bottom or top of the whip as there would be a slight slowing, stop and reverse of the muzzle moment.

  8. #23
    Member chainsaw's Avatar
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    Only fire 3 - 5 shots max, then stop & let barrel cool down ( I allow 5 mins and more in summer) before your shoot the next string.

  9. #24
    Member sneeze's Avatar
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    Ok. Im not saying that looking for a flat spot in the velocity wont be good place to start, I am saying you cant find it with a single shot per charge weight. You might fluke it but getting really lucky would be your best hope. The optical chrony you are using will hinder that process even more ,as light changes so will the readings.
    Yes you are looking for a node in the velocity range that has the muzzel in the quietest/motionless faze as the bullet exits. How you find it is pretty big topic, books have been written on it.

    First up though , what is your goal? what are you trying to achieve with this rifle and ammunition?
    If its hunting deer to 300 yds then the group you described above is ok. Load up and go shoot some targets, a few groups at 100 to establish the genuine accuracy of you,the rifle and load and then out to 300 yds from different positions to see what your limitations are. You will benefit a hell of a lot more from shooting an ok load a lot than trying to tune a 1/2moa load.
    "You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by sneeze View Post
    Ok. Im not saying that looking for a flat spot in the velocity wont be good place to start, I am saying you cant find it with a single shot per charge weight. You might fluke it but getting really lucky would be your best hope. The optical chrony you are using will hinder that process even more ,as light changes so will the readings.
    Yes you are looking for a node in the velocity range that has the muzzel in the quietest/motionless faze as the bullet exits. How you find it is pretty big topic, books have been written on it.

    First up though , what is your goal? what are you trying to achieve with this rifle and ammunition?
    If its hunting deer to 300 yds then the group you described above is ok. Load up and go shoot some targets, a few groups at 100 to establish the genuine accuracy of you,the rifle and load and then out to 300 yds from different positions to see what your limitations are. You will benefit a hell of a lot more from shooting an ok load a lot than trying to tune a 1/2moa load.
    You know that scene in the movie shooter were he shoots the soup can at over a mile to be able to do that's the dream.

    But realistically I am just wanting to learn and improve, yea my groups and load are fine for hunting, i have never actually shot past 180ish while hunting big game, i shoot further in the summer practicing on hares as shot placment isnt to critical, as long as I hit the hare it's dead fast. And i shoot much further on paper. I can punch less than inch groups at 100y easy off good rests etc. One day I would like to be confident to take say a 600y shot if that shot is the only one available and it's an animal of a life time. But I mostly just want to improve and learn, I have no set goals, I am happy to hunt within my limitations and I'm probably much harder on myself than most.

    What I would like to do is keep improving and if that's just trigger time that's fine I can do that, but the reason I came here was to find out what the guys that can make thos 600,800 and 1000y plus shots are doing. If no one is worried about the different velocities they get from different load temps and they are making thos shots consistently then it probably does not matter, but it may also be the reason why i can hit way out some times and not others, as the day cools off am i lossing enough veocity to make my load hit 1 inch lower at 500y? Should i have a seperate drop chart for when the temps drop? It is a subject I have researched around a bit and found not much information.

    When I was involved in motorsport the quickest way to get your self into a top 10 positions or podium was to learn from the guys in the top ten positions, once I started asking them questions they let me into small secrets that can make massive differences in vehicle setup and how it behaves, things I found out 90% of the competitors didn't know and were I'm guessing, to embarrassed to ask about. This is where I assume the top shooters hang out so I'm asking the dumb questions trying to speed up my learning. It's much easier to have a handful of guys that know what they are talking about set you straight rather than have to test it all and learn from the beginning.

    I am trying to learn what others are doing and what sort of standards they are holding themselves to before making thos long shots, in saying this though I can understand why people are not so keen to come forward with advice on some of the finer points as there is always differing of opinions and the discussions can get pretty nasty, I have read some of the old threads where people got absolutely ripped into for sharing thier opinions or results. I have had some great help over the years from some of the members here but it is ushally via a pm after I have asked for help, I do believe most members are very helpful but also worried to point sombody in the wrong direction, that is why I say things like "it appears to have worked" I haven't gone as far to prove it has worked yet so I say appears and then hopefully nobody takes my word as gospel that it is the best way to do it.

    In saying that it's good to have a bit of discussion saved on the forum and i really appreciate your input, that way when people come looking the information is there for them.

    Sorry that became a bit of a novel I just thought I if I explain where I am coming from it may be easier for people to add some input.

    Cheers

  11. #26
    Member chainsaw's Avatar
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    Aye, you never stop learning.

  12. #27
    Gone................. mikee's Avatar
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    The more I practice actual shooting at distance in all conditions the better I get. I used to think hitting a large steel target at 300m consistently was a good day now days that seems to be the closest distance I shoot and the steel plates are getting smaller and smaller and I EXPECT to hit them every time.

    The most interesting thing I have learned being at various ranges while others are shooting is what other peoples accuracy expectations (and capabilities actually) are.
    I think powder temperature is only a very small variable compared to things like wind, atmospheric conditions, technique and having consistent ammo etc.
    rusl and chainsaw like this.
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  13. #28
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    @mikee this is what I'm trying to get info on, I don't know others that are interested in shooting like I do, my mates are happy if they can hit a bucket at 50y so I have no benchmark to compare and no one to steal ideas off.

    I am inclined to agree the load temps thing is most likely a bit of a tangent I have gone off on mostly because it's what I posted about to start with. If load temps are a minor thing what would you consider the priorities, consistent ammo and wind reading obviously, how consistent is consistent ammo? If mines not meeting the bench mark should I be looking at neck turning instead of temperatures?

    What's your benchmark of accuracy?

    Im just throwing questions out here to try and get the discussion going I'm not try to target any one person especially. But if you are shooting long range or super accurate please add your opinions. I am happy to discuss any area where people feel there are areas for improvment I may not have sorted yet. Good solid shooting techniques are only going to come with practise but any of the other areas I have not sorted are still going to hold me back.

  14. #29
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    I will just add so you get an idea of where I am at, I can hit a 5 inch plate at 350y but I can't do it every time, like you say you expect to hit it now every time, I am not surprised when I miss it happens often enough. This is where I'm starting to look at other things more seriously, is it me or some other variable I'm not noticing.

  15. #30
    Member sneeze's Avatar
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    Mate I think your questions are a little scattered. You're worried about temp induced velocity change which is a small part of a big picture, yet seem to be at the very beginning of load development. Talking about a 1 inch drop at 500yds yet the group from your test is a touch over 1 MOA so it would at best print a 5 inch group at 500yd in perfect conditions with perfect shooting.
    This can be a long process from a cold start. Small steps ,from the beginning, no point getting ahead of yourself.
    Shoot a lot of paper?steel, it dosnt lie , work on the load with the OCW process or something similar. I personally use a basic 3 shot group test for powder, looking for group size and ES ,SD, followed by seating depth if needed. maybe neck tension and primer change if I need further tweaking.
    Theres little point in sweating the small stuff till you've got the big stuff sorted.

    For the record, with temp sensitivity, once I have a proven accurate load ( more than 3 consecutive groups on different days ) with a good ES and SD in single figures(hopefully) I will shoot it in the temps I think are relevant and note the speed and drops. This used to be a slow process but the accuracy of the labradar is proving a great time saver. Once I have the change in fps per deg of temp change I can enter it into the ballistic app on my phone.
    mikee likes this.
    "You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin

 

 

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