infideleggwelder
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
need a Minimum load for IMR 4895 and a 200 gr cast 303 Brit. need max as well, starting point first. anyone?
H4198 and Trail Boss are plentiful around here. Discontinued and Alliant powders are practically non-existent, I know.
The Lyman book might not have it because they couldn't get it to work well.
Personally I've never gotten H or IMR 4895 to work well with cast bullets except really heavy big bore stuff like 500gr cast in a 45-70. With most bottleneck cartridges either the velocity is too high and I get leading and no accuracy or the powder doesn't burn fully so I get really inconsistent results. If you went with an extra hard bullet (20-25+ bhn maybe?) it might work with a really smooth, crisp rifling but I'd say there's still a good chance of leading.
Most of my cast bullet shooting is in surplus rifles with somewhat rough to downright horrible bores so maybe that is why. According to my records I loaded some 300WM with cast bullets and H4895 for my Rem 700 but I can't find the records of when I shot them. Maybe they're sitting in an ammo box somewhere still.Your experience is about the opposite of mine. I use IMR4895 in several different rifles with velocity up to 2000 fps with no leading. Those cartridges include 9.3x57, .308, 303 and 30-06 using cast bullets. I've also found that cast bullets that are too hard tend to cause more leading issues rather than less.
Most of my cast bullet shooting is in surplus rifles with somewhat rough to downright horrible bores so maybe that is why. According to my records I loaded some 300WM with cast bullets and H4895 for my Rem 700 but I can't find the records of when I shot them. Maybe they're sitting in an ammo box somewhere still.
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I did some digging and most people say the 60% rule works with IMR4895.
For the H4895 and 60% rule see here: http://www.imrpowder.com/PDF/Youth Loads.pdf
Now the question is, is it safe to use data for a 180gr bullet and swap to a 200gr bullet if you reduce the charge to 60% of the listed max?
60% of 41.0gr is 24.6gr. That sounds reasonable to me. I would probably start at maybe 25gr and work up but hold no liability if it explodes.
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Woodleigh sells 215gr .312" RN bullets and have load data on their site. There is no 4895 listed but they do list a load with varget. It's 36 to 39.5gr with velocities of 2130 to 2265. With H4350 they list 42-45gr and 2045 to 2185fps.
303british.com also has loads for 215gr RN bullets but still no 4895. Their loads use H4350, H4831, and Reloader19. Lower maximum velocities at around 2100fps at max.
So if you want to try to develop a load for a 200gr cast bullet with IMR4895 you could try the 60% rule with 180gr data, chrony the rounds as you work up, and know you have a ceiling of around 2200fps though I'd stop at around 2000-2100fps. Chances are you'll run into accuracy issues when you start to approach 2000fps so it may be moot.



























