As always its the lottery of the lot numbers. Most are losers but if you dont buy to try youll never find the "ONE". Do you ever try any of the Eley or just stick to the Lapua because of your chambers in your specific rifles. I finally was able to get my mitts on some Eley Semi Auto Benchrest Precision. Im going to do some testing as soon as possible. Its not cheap but none of the quality ammo is cheap. You wanna play yah pretty much gottah pay. Thanks for showing your results with the Midas plus. Some very respectable groups.
Thanks. And thanks to Biologist.
I usually shoot Lapua for the practical reason that it is often more readily available than Eley. To elaborate, when I first began shooting, initially with much more enthusiasm than skill or knowledge, I was able to get a few bricks of Eley Team, Eley's grade of ammo that's similar to Lapua's Center X, both the bottom rung of a three rung ladder. (For Lapua it's X-Act, Midas, and CX; for Eley it's Tenex, Match, and Team).
The Team I obtained was already older stock or from among the last of that grade available from Eley for a period of time. In short, for reasons that aren't clear, Eley didn't produce Team for a number of years, making it available again only within the last couple of years. As a result, I bought Center X during that hiatus in Eley Team availablility. I bought blind and was disappointed as often as not.
To make a long story short, I shoot Lapua because it's been as or more available than Eley. RWS, incidentally, seems less available than Lapua or Eley in North America in general.
Regarding a chamber-ammo match up, that is often too overstated and mistakenly promoted on many forum threads. Unless a chamber is specifically made for one particular make of ammo, there's nothing intrinsic about an otherwise good chamber -- such as those usually on rifles such as my Anschutz rifles -- that make them favour a particular ammo brand. Anschutz and other match rifle makers design their chambers to CIP specs (if they are based in CIP reg following nations), and so that they will shoot all makes of match ammo well. The rifle makers don't know what makes of ammo shooters will use.
Even when chambers are designed with one make of ammo in mind -- be it Lapua or Eley, for example -- that doesn't keep such chambers from also shooting other makes of ammo well. The expectation (or hope) is that, with the very best lots of whatever make of ammo the chamber is designed, a very good shooter may expect some improvement in his BR score. It's not expected that it will make a
significant or dramatic difference in the results.
In short, no shooter should ever expect that a "Lapua" chamber, for example, will shoot all lots of Lapua well. It can't. An ammo-specific chamber can't fix inconsistent ammo. It doesn't mean that lot testing isn't necessary. An inconsistent lot will not shoot well
because it's not consistent.