I was not using a rear rest, I had the bipod up front but the back was just against my shoulder. Also I didn't have any gloves and my cold fingers weren't helping anything either.As an aside, were you using a rear bag when sighting-in? A solid front rest? @ 100 yards? That rifle should easily be able to get them in a 1" sq., but tough if you don't have a sold rest front/back.
I've seen those 53's around. I like the boat tail as well, something I wish the 55's had. I will have to give them a shot and see how they work for me.I'm now loading Hornady's new 53 gr. Vmax. They claim a high BC of .290 It groups really nice for me. Have a look into this bullet, it seems like there's lots of info out there and lots of 223 shooters happy with the 53
I will definitely, also I will try to get a report on the 55's this Sunday. Me and my brother are going to get some groups out at 200 and see how we are doing.I have the Savage 11 in 243, great value. I'm sure your model 11 will shoot the 53's real good. Maybe you could do a range report if you decide to give them a try, good luck
A close second was the Hornady 60gr. V-Max in front of 27gr. of Varget.
Hornady 9th Edition lists 24.9 grains of Varget as Max for the 60 grain bullets... that is not to say that your gun can't handle 27 grains... because the Hornady manual is more conservative than most... but be sure to "work up." You are new so make sure to double check online advice with actual data and don't start your load at max. 27 grains of Varget is likely going to be a compressed load, I am borderline compressed at 26.5... and if your gun has a short throat you could experience higher than normal pressure... lately we have been working with CFE-223, and it is proving to be excellent... start at 24.5 and work up to 27.5 with a 55 grain load... watch for the usual signs of pressure and play with seating depth... if I was starting out from scratch it would be with CFE-223 and the 55 V-Max. Good shooting.
I use mostly 53gr vmax infron of 25.7gr of varget.
I tried out the cfe223 yesterday with the 53gr vmax. It shot about the same size groups as with varget but took 28grains to do it. I didnt have the chrony out so Im not sure how fast they were. It seemed pretty dirty though.
We are getting 100+ fps more than Varget with equivalent loads and slightly better accuracy... we have not noticed that CFE-223 is any dirtier than Varget or H4895... really like the powder... and have gone through two pounds testing it so far... I am prepared to say that it is my current favorite in both .223 and .308... the jury is still out on .243 and 7mm-08.
I'm now loading Hornady's new 53 gr. Vmax. They claim a high BC of .290 It groups really nice for me. Have a look into this bullet, it seems like there's lots of info out there and lots of 223 shooters happy with the 53
Hornady 9th Edition lists 24.9 grains of Varget as Max for the 60 grain bullets... that is not to say that your gun can't handle 27 grains... because the Hornady manual is more conservative than most... but be sure to "work up." You are new so make sure to double check online advice with actual data and don't start your load at max. 27 grains of Varget is likely going to be a compressed load, I am borderline compressed at 26.5... and if your gun has a short throat you could experience higher than normal pressure... lately we have been working with CFE-223, and it is proving to be excellent... start at 24.5 and work up to 27.5 with a 55 grain load... watch for the usual signs of pressure and play with seating depth... if I was starting out from scratch it would be with CFE-223 and the 55 V-Max. Good shooting.
Hodgdon data lists 27.0grs of Varget as max for a 60gr bullet. Its a compressed load.
As to the OP. I use 60gr V-Max, 26.5gr Varget, CCI BR-4 primers, COL 2.250". Groups under an inch at 100 in my Stevens 200. Im sure I could tweak it more but I haven't gotten around to further load development. I just worked up to 26.5gr in .5gr increments and stopped when I had groups under an inch.