After firing some different primer and powder combinations with my sons 303br, it's showing a bit of promise and I am starting to take this rifle a bit more seriously in terms of load development. Fire formed brass seems to be making a difference.
To date we have completed some ladders with 4 different powders (and then recently from those original 10 shot results) shot 5 shot ladders around the promising charges in smaller step charge amounts with the campro 180's. There are two combinations that are hard to ignore.
These are flat base bullets. I have 100 Speer 180 flat base and 100 Sierra 180 flat base to try out as well.
My question is, if I now incorporate OCW methods around the results of the 10 and 5 shot ladder tests, can a person interchange a different flat base 180 gr and use the previous results to continue on?
This is a No 4 Mk 1/2 with a sporter stock and elevator site that seems to be on. I am not a gunsmith by any stretch but the barrel on it doesn't appear factory. Different finish on the barrel from the receiver.
Not looking for a big philosophical discussion at this point however my understanding of Dan Newberry's explanation is that the charge amount should be tolerant in keeping within parameters. My interest, for those more experienced here, is whether switching fb bullets is outside of parameters for this method of load development.
If my understanding of OCW is incorrect in relation to this situation then I'd like to know that as well. If I can apply it to similar design bullets for different chambering's it's something I would throw into the arsenal of load development in the future.
Regards
Ronr
Givens
- entering 5th year reloading
- hunter primarily that is addicted to developing loads, learning, and shooting paper in the off season with his kids
- neck turn and anneal and all that stuff for factory hunting rifles...to solve reloading process issues...not because I thought I needed to do it.
- Mystic's load development has worked very well for rifles we own in the past. Ladder testing is simply satisfying curiosity if the two different methods can arrive at the same results.
- Going off script, I want to experience for myself what other powder/primer/bullet weight combinations would work instead of the tried and true combinations that are available.
To date we have completed some ladders with 4 different powders (and then recently from those original 10 shot results) shot 5 shot ladders around the promising charges in smaller step charge amounts with the campro 180's. There are two combinations that are hard to ignore.
These are flat base bullets. I have 100 Speer 180 flat base and 100 Sierra 180 flat base to try out as well.
My question is, if I now incorporate OCW methods around the results of the 10 and 5 shot ladder tests, can a person interchange a different flat base 180 gr and use the previous results to continue on?
This is a No 4 Mk 1/2 with a sporter stock and elevator site that seems to be on. I am not a gunsmith by any stretch but the barrel on it doesn't appear factory. Different finish on the barrel from the receiver.
Not looking for a big philosophical discussion at this point however my understanding of Dan Newberry's explanation is that the charge amount should be tolerant in keeping within parameters. My interest, for those more experienced here, is whether switching fb bullets is outside of parameters for this method of load development.
If my understanding of OCW is incorrect in relation to this situation then I'd like to know that as well. If I can apply it to similar design bullets for different chambering's it's something I would throw into the arsenal of load development in the future.
Regards
Ronr
Givens
- entering 5th year reloading
- hunter primarily that is addicted to developing loads, learning, and shooting paper in the off season with his kids
- neck turn and anneal and all that stuff for factory hunting rifles...to solve reloading process issues...not because I thought I needed to do it.
- Mystic's load development has worked very well for rifles we own in the past. Ladder testing is simply satisfying curiosity if the two different methods can arrive at the same results.
- Going off script, I want to experience for myself what other powder/primer/bullet weight combinations would work instead of the tried and true combinations that are available.


















































