Greetings Kiwiazonic,
That's a nice rig. A couple of things to consider in your deliberations. First fast barrels give more velocity because they develop more pressure. Second you are working up your load in mid winter. I don't know how temperature sensitive R26 is but the pressure you get on a mid summer day in the Kaweka's could be considerably higher. Perhaps a bit of testing in hot weather may be wise before you load too many.
Regards Grandpamac.
Hi Tentman, thanks so much for this input. Could you please send me the quickload results you got, I would be real keen to see what it says.
It makes me a bit nervous the Hornady are publishing load data of 67.3gr as the max.
https://press.hornady.com/assets/sit...-eld-match.pdf
Thanks grandpamac, at this point I am thinking I will reduce the load. I have a wife and kids to think about so playing risky with loads is not something I am keen to do.
Thanks for all your help. I see you are Hawke's Bay as well, hope to see you on the hills sometime.
@kiwiazonic thank you for taking the time to reply to all the questions that where put to you.
Manners maketh the man
It's all fun and games till Darthvader comes along
I respect your beliefs but don't impose them on me.
Can you get a case fired in your rifle and weight it. Then weight it filled with water level to the case mouth (fill with a syringe or drop by drop tapping the case as you go to release the air bubbles that stick to the sides of it, strike of the meniscus with a bit of card or something)
This, combined with the accurate velocity you have, enables Q/L to be "calibrated" to your rifle, and very accurate results are possible -0 for both pressure and changes to velocity from charge variations.
There is a new free reloading tool out, its called GRT (short for Gordons Reloading Tool) and the results it produces match Q/L's very closely even though it uses a different internal ballistics model. I sorta prefer it over Q/L now as I feel the open development model (nothing to do with the internal ballistics) has greater scope for advancement. It also has a tool that enables OBT (Otimal Barrel Time - an accuracy theory which produces somewhat patchy results, but is useful none the less) to be fine tuned very easily.
Cheers
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