Should I try the entire range in smaller increments? My plan was to find a charge or two that it showed preference toward. Say for example that 24gr and 25.5 showed promise. I would then load and test some at 23.8, 24.0, 24.2, 25.3, 25.5, and 25.7. Or should I start at 23gr and go to 27gr (or wherever my max may be) in 0.2gr increments?
I don have a click type powder measure; I charge by weight all the time. I trickle my charges on a balance beam scale for the test loads. point 1
How do I adjust the cyclic rate of my SA20? It doesn't have an adjustable gas block. Should I try a heavier buffer? point 2
My CQB loads were minimal charges of 4198 or 8208. With the slower burning BL-C(2) I noticed the significant increase in gas port pressure right away; even with the minimum charge. point 3
I use TulAmmo Small rifle primers. The only reason I chose them was the 5000 I purchased for $130. Would you suggest I try a Magnum primer, or just another brand. For Large Rifle and Large pistol I use CCI.
Thanks,
Alec
point 1, add 4 kernels of 8208 to the scale... does it register that amount (that is pretty much 0.1gr)... add 4 more and see if the change is consistent and linear. Most beam scales aren't that sensitive so the reading may not represent what is actually in the pan. +/- 0.2gr is pretty typical and that will pull you in and out of the desired node and drive you bonkers cause you will get "flyers".... which they aren't.
With a properly set up and accurate 223, I can see 0.1gr of powder weight change on target.
Point 2 - get an adjustable gas block and a heavier buffer and spring. Ideally, the BCG will not hit the back of the buffer tube before moving forward... yep, a bunch of swapping parts and testing but it is possible to get this way down vs factory which in many set ups is horrid.
Point 3 - get ready to test powders for the bullet weight you want to use. Again, it is balancing chamber pressure, port pressure, gas volume, accuracy, velocity and BCG cycling. Why so many just don't get it right or give up trying.... change A to get B but that affects C so you need to tweak D and hope that doesn't mess it all up again.
I first started by controlling the BCG to get it functioning reliably around the max pressures I wanted... then started tweaking the loads. Semis are the biggest PITA to tune.
As a final step when you have all the above sorted out, do test other primers. Maybe your rifle is sensitive to care... maybe it will not. Some SR primers aren't hot enough to ensure complete and consistent ignition with lower charges especially in the cold. The hottest ones will change your load weights enough you shouldn't just randomly swap in primers... always work up with change of ANY component.
To keep from going bonkers, I set up my barrel for a specific bullet weight range (Service rifle - so anything 70gr and heavier and still fit in the mag). That narrowed down the components that would work.
finally, you need to match the bullet to your chamber throat... that can be fun but again, with so many variations on the AR set up, you need to measure and know what you are up against. maybe this is the first place to start. Also, alot of AR barrels are made to pretty generous specs. Many just don't shoot.
Sounds impossible but it isn't... For me, I just speced what I wanted in a match barrel. Worked on the moving bits and then focused on load tuning.
But the results are certainly worth it...
Jerry