Am thinking of trying the 49.5 imr 4064 pushing a 130. I know Jack O'Connor probably preferred the 4831 later in his life, but my options are imr 4064 or Imr 4350. Anyone have some advice on accurate 270 deer loads?
This is sort of a crazy co-incidence but when I was a somewhat younger dawg people seemed to be divided between not even having heard of hand-loading and those thinking it was an incredibly dangerous activity best keep confined to gun nuts with a death wish. Growing up in the bush wasn't all bad, but it wasn't exactly the information super highway.
So anyways, I got a copy of JOCs Complete book of the rifle and shotgun from the Outdoor Life book club and read the snot out of it until the covers fell off when I probably should have been just playing with blocks. About the only people I knew that actually had heard of a 270 pronounced it as a two hundred and seventy, and knew a guy that knew a guy that said it shot flatter than piss on a platter and killed better than a 30-06. Or so they heard.On the other hand my hero said it was great and light recoiling and killed like lightning and I'd already decided that a 30-30 was a piece of #### just by observation.
In that book JOC mentioned a few other calibers and more than one load for a 270; but did mention that the most consistently accurate load he had ever found for light sporters was 49.5 grains of 4064 with a 130. Naturally the first thing I did when my parents weren't looking was buy a Parker Hale in 270 and ordered a press and dies from the guy at the hardware store 35 miles away. He was sort of hesitant, but cleansed his concious by giving me the number of a guy he knew that had actually loaded a shell before. Like I was going to call him, that was long distance and cost money, which the one thing I knew I didn't have any of.
So, with nobody home and a press that wasn't bolted to anything I loaded 1 shell at what the Lee scoops swore was 47.5 grains of 4064 and stuck the gun out the door with the door between me and potential disaster and pulled the trigger. It made a pretty good bang sound, but when I ejected the casing it was all black and smoky. I thought that that meant I was a c*** hair away from blowing up stuff, but there was nothing else to do on
the farm and since the next possible increment I could move up with the scoops was Jacks 49.5 grains I went to that. Naturaly being the sane and cautious person that I am I held it in my left hand because a logical right handed person would rather lose his left hand than his right hand. It made a pretty good bang sound and nothing blew up. Crazy thing at the time is the case wasn't smokey this time. These days people would call my process "working up a load".
Want to hear something funny? I shot 3 barrels out with that load. If you got something to say to Jack; say it to me first![]()
Am thinking of trying the 49.5 imr 4064 pushing a 130.
Final advice, please get a book with published load data and do not rely on what people tell you.
Yes, Its a long work up to 49.5 from the 47.3 max (starting at min obviously). I kinda doubt I'd get there.If you meant for a 270 Win, 49.5 gr of IMR 4064 for a 130gr bullet, you are way over max powder weight according to Hodgdon's reloading data, and my Lee reloading manual (2nd ed).
Hodgdon website lists max powder weight for IMR 4064 and 130gr bullet at 47.5gr for a Hornady SP, and 47.3gr for a Barnes TSX (same in the Lee manual).
Hodgdon website lists the Barnes pressure at max load at 62,900 PSI. My Lee Reloading manual lists the pressure at max load of IMR 4064 (47.5gr) for a 130gr "jacketed bullet" at 62,500 PSI. These are very high pressures, at the edge of what is considered safe.
Unless I am reading my manual and the Hodgdon reloading data website wrong, I think your suggestion of trying 49.5gr of IMR 4064 is going to be significantly over pressure and potentially dangerous.
Here is Hodgdon's reloading data link, where you can check out the min-max load data:
https://www.hodgdonreloading.com/
I was surprised that for the 270 Win, with its long history, that Hodgdon's website (as of today) only lists data for only two 130gr bullets (for that powder). But mass is mass, so most bullets (not jammed into rifling) should be similar for min-max powder charge weights.
I recommend you start at the minimum powder charge weights listed in reloading manuals, and work up carefully and observe for pressure signs, and to stay within the min-max powder charge.
^^^^^ This.
Am thinking of trying the 49.5 imr 4064 pushing a 130. I know Jack O'Connor probably preferred the 4831 later in his life, but my options are imr 4064 or Imr 4350. Anyone have some advice on accurate 270 deer loads?
55 gr, 60gr H4831sc for 130 gr bullets. Am finding RL23 in the 55gr bracket is good for 140gr bullets. Could probably work up for 130gr bullets.
Not in front of me. However, if I remember Pet loads it's 59 or 60 grains H4831 and a 130. Other articles I've read quote O'Connor as saying if that load with a 130 flat base bullet will not shoot its time to rebarrel.
When it comes to early slow powders, be careful. Ganderite should be along to comment, but here's my understanding. Bruce Hodgdon discovered the navy dumping tonnes of 40mm anti aircraft shells in the ocean. He bought warehouses full of it, each shell containing approximately five lbs of the powder that would go on to start his business h4831. That and 4350 were about the only slow rifle powders available. Circa late 40's to 60's. That powder is almost certainly extinct or now approaching 80 years old. More recent manufacture h4831 is faster than that post WWII surplus. Further a few years ago Hodgedon bought IMR powders. Apparently h4831 and imr4831 are now identical; whereas, previously, imr was faster than H.
So start low and work up.
My understanding fastest to slowest.
Imr4350》》h4350》》imr4831》》h4831
H4831 and IMR 4831 are not identical. This is a common error.
If you meant for a 270 Win, 49.5 gr of IMR 4064 for a 130gr bullet, you are way over max powder weight according to Hodgdon's reloading data, and my Lee reloading manual (2nd ed).
Hodgdon website lists max powder weight for IMR 4064 and 130gr bullet at 47.5gr for a Hornady SP, and 47.3gr for a Barnes TSX (same in the Lee manual).
Hodgdon website lists the Barnes pressure at max load at 62,900 PSI. My Lee Reloading manual lists the pressure at max load of IMR 4064 (47.5gr) for a 130gr "jacketed bullet" at 62,500 PSI. These are very high pressures, at the edge of what is considered safe.
Unless I am reading my manual and the Hodgdon reloading data website wrong, I think your suggestion of trying 49.5gr of IMR 4064 is going to be significantly over pressure and potentially dangerous.
Here is Hodgdon's reloading data link, where you can check out the min-max load data:
https://www.hodgdonreloading.com/
I was surprised that for the 270 Win, with its long history, that Hodgdon's website (as of today) only lists data for only two 130gr bullets (for that powder). But mass is mass, so most bullets (not jammed into rifling) should be similar for min-max powder charge weights.
I recommend you start at the minimum powder charge weights listed in reloading manuals, and work up carefully and observe for pressure signs, and to stay within the min-max powder charge.
^^^^^ This.
Think you need to buy more reloading manuals. I have a old one with even higher loads then that for 4064. All things are not written in stone.