Pardon my newbie-arse-roll-your-own skills here, but isn't COAL set by maximum SAAMI specs?
Varget 35.9 - 44.9
4895 37.7 - 46.4 over all length 2.800 inches, with the Varget I'd start around 41grs and work up 1/2 gr per 3 or 5 shot group
Original poster asked for a load for his bullet and powder in the 308.
Maynard, probably the most experienced reloader and shooter on here for accurate 308 loadings, gave him a precise answer.
Sadly, it looks like his answer was ignored.
Yes, but many people load to either maximum mag lenght or ±15 thou off the lands.
minimal load 37,7gr??? that's 6 grains under hodgdon's minimum
Why do you guys pay so much attention to what a loading book gives as a starting load?
A starting load is just a load you start out with, when everything is new to you, that will not give you too much pressure. Common sense tells you that if you dropped down 5% from a given max load, you should be safe. Want to be super safe on your first try? Drop down 10% from their max load.
OK, Charles, what you say just adds to the confusion of getting all hung up on starting loads.
Who gives a crooked toadstool about what some book gives as a starting load? The important figure is that given as maximum.
Every loading book out there has determined that their load shown as maximum, should be safe in a modern rifle in good condition and that load will fall within the SAAMI standards. However, in case there is something different about our rifle, we will, the first time we use that combination of powder and bullet, drop the charge down a bit, just to be safe.
It was much less confusing when starting loads were never given. Here is a copy of a page from the Norma Gunbug's Guide. This little booklet, all 24 pages of it, was the sole reloading book I had to start out with and the only loading book I had for some time. I notice that I copied here, the loading data for US powders, while the book was primarily for Norma powder. Note that every weight of bullet has the same powder charge, even if the style of the bullet is different. Also notice that H4831 is not given. That is because Hodgdon had not yet put it on the market.!
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Here is a Winchester chart, from as late as the 1970s, which does still not give staarting loads.
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And here is a Hodgdon lading chart. No starting loads, just telling us what we all knew, start down a bit.
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didn't you mean:Note that every weight of bullet has the same powder charge, even if the style of the bullet is different
Why do you guys pay so much attention to what a loading book gives as a starting load?
A starting load is just a load you start out with, when everything is new to you, that will not give you too much pressure. Common sense tells you that if you dropped down 5% from a given max load, you should be safe. Want to be super safe on your first try? Drop down 10% from their max load.