Hey all. I have a few questions I'm hoping the experienced folks can help me with. I've been reloading for my 30-06 for a few years now, but I've just been cranking them out using the settings my old man used for his Remington 742. I'm reloading for my 700 now and have decided to make some rounds suited to it. So I got some Speer 168 gr bullets (they were out of sierras and I'm still messing around figuring things out) and set to figuring out where my lands were. Using my original settings, I had almost a quarter inch jump to the lands. I've got it down to 0.090" and if I go much further the bullets are loose and not aligned properly. Is 0.090 alright or is it still so far off as to make no difference? Still way under mag length so no worries there.
Next question, regarding the ladder test. I loaded up 18 rounds in half grain increments from starting charge to max charge of H4895. Due to shooter error, I'll have to reshoot the test, but the one thing the test showed me was that even at max there were no pressure signs that I could see. Is it safe to increase on the max, seeing as max for one rifle would different in another, or should I leave max as max? I don't really need the added velocity, max charge gave me 2740 fps, I'm just curious.
Thanks in advance for the help and I apologize for the rambling nature of this post, I'm working my fourth shift in two days.
Next question, regarding the ladder test. I loaded up 18 rounds in half grain increments from starting charge to max charge of H4895. Due to shooter error, I'll have to reshoot the test, but the one thing the test showed me was that even at max there were no pressure signs that I could see. Is it safe to increase on the max, seeing as max for one rifle would different in another, or should I leave max as max? I don't really need the added velocity, max charge gave me 2740 fps, I'm just curious.
Thanks in advance for the help and I apologize for the rambling nature of this post, I'm working my fourth shift in two days.


















































