diegocn,
A 0.8 group is great for hunting. within the distances you are going to shoot, such ES and SD will not make much of a difference.
Now if you want to be a perfectionist I would suggest the following. You will need to have good brass of similar weight and trimmed to the same length and preferably full length sized with a 2 thousands bump, or neck sized. Proceed with a ladder test. This means load 1 cartridge with powder increments of 0.2 grains. Shoot with a chronograph without worrying for impact or groups at this time. Find your speed node which is a plateau where speed does not change much over 2 or 3 consecutive loads. Once you find that speed node, load 3 cartridges with that load and shoot them. Look for group and ES as well as SD. If you are not happy, try a COL +/- 0.005 from your original load. With that you should be very good.
Using this method allowed me to find sub moa each time with some SD of 2-3. I even had a load with a SD of 1. Go figure.
Funny that you mentioned this, because that's the entire reason I started chasing ES/SD. It's not to chase accuracy but rather use the 10 shots load development process. The 10 shots load development process is described by the 6.5guys here:
http://www.65guys.com/10-round-load-development-ladder-test/
This is the fps vs powder charge for my rifle using this method:
From here I selected the middle of my node at 45 grain of Varget. Loaded 5 more and to my disappointment the fps can go as high as what 45.4~45.6 gr will achieve. The group is still respectable for hunting but I start to question whether the plateau I see in the data is a true plateau or just coincidence caused by large variation in fps.
I really like the idea of the 10 shots load development process as this saves tons of time and components. However I question the meaningfulness of this method if I cannot get consistent fps from my loads. TBH I think the group I had there is as good as picking a random powder charge and load 5 rounds.
The rifle is setup as a lightweight hunting rifle, with 16" barrel and the group was shot with a leupold ultralight 2-7x28mm scope at 7x power. The group is definitely usable for hunting up to 300 yard, and with 55 ES the drop difference at 300 yard is less than 1" anyway. After that I won't be able to hold over consistently with the tiny scope anyway.
It sounds like the answer so far is:
- Better brass
- Deburr flash hole and case mouth
- Neck sizing + 0.002" shoulder bump
- Brass and bullet sorting
- Better chronograph
Before the posted I was wondering if annealing would make a big improvement, and plan on sending some brass to a friend to anneal. Sounds like that's not an issue.
I think I'll get started with some lapua brass and lee collet die (friend has them so no cost to try). Currently I use small base sizing die on all my hunting ammo for reliability, probably should stop doing that too?