I think you may want to reconsider your choice of powder. BL-C2 will work but it looks a little slow. I think it's safe to say the action will suffer long term damage from constant use of heavy bullets, heavy charges, or slow powders. I'm just starting to load for a gas gun so I must rely on others. One consistant theme is to use powders with a burn rate in the 4895 range, A quick look at Hornady's chart shows IMR 8208 XBR, IMR 4895, A2495, H4895, H335 are in the same range (from fastest to slowest). I've seen loads listed with powders as fast as IMR 3031 and as slow as IMR 4064 as ideal for the M-14/M1A and therefore M-305. Again refering to Hornady's chart that puts A2495 right in the middle. Some other charts (Sierra for example) are quite different from Hornady's but Hogdon's chart basically agrees with Hornady's. I'll go with the powder manufacture on this one. So after all that hot air, your best powder is IMR 4895, A2495, or H4895.
Here's a load to try, 41.5 gr IMR 4895, Hornady 168 gr Match, and CCI 200/Winchester LR primers. You will not be disapointed! Don't buy 168 A-Max, they may not stabilize in your barrel. 178 gr Hornady match may be too long as well. If you want to try some match bullets any 155 should work, 168 SMK/Hornady match, or 175 SMK's are great. Reading your comments it looks like the ideal bullet for you would be Hornady's 150 gr BT-FMJ or Sierra's 150 gr FMJBT. the good part is they are cheaper than the other bullets I've mentioned.
A few other thoughts, be very methodical about how you reload. Pay close attention to your case length and keep them trimed to the proper length. Also watch your C.O.L. keep it at the length your manual states (which should be 2.80"). A mistake can be very costly to your rifle or your health. Lee dies will work but I think you'll find them wanting over time. With my bolt guns I use a body die, neck die, and competition seater. For my gas gun I've a set of Redding small body dies on the way. Full length sizing will give more consistant feeding even if it may reduce case life. Regular Lee dies will work fine for sizing but I think you'll find any of the others will produce a better seating die. Your Lee crimp die is something You might want to use regardless if you get other dies. Not so much to keep your bullets from moving but to give a consistant neck tension. That should help keep your reloads long range performance more consistant. The die instructions suggest you turn it in a half turn after it touches the shell holder. That will be plenty, I just give it a gentle crimp, just a little less than half a turn.

There's no such thing as Battle Rifle accurate reloads. The tighter the group the better!