.308 SMK, Scenar or Berger?

EnderW

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I worked up a load for my Savage 12 VLP with 175 SMK HPBT. I tried the 168 SMK HPBT also. I like both bullets at 200yds (had no opportunity to shoot at longer distances yet.) My question is should I just stick with what I know works or are the more expensive bergers really that much better. How about The 155 or 167 Scenars? Also what velocity are you guys running your bullets?
 
Join the ORA, lots of practice shoots just north of Alliston at the Base not too far from Toronto. That's were I do most of my long range shooting out to the 1k yard line. Lots of nice friendly helpful people there.
Happy to hear the bolt bearing is working out for you.
 
I have always had good luck with SMKs in any calibre and now they are my go to bullet. I have also had very good luck with Scenars but they are not so easy to find all the time, around here at least. Bergers on the other hand have been my nemesis. I have tried them in many rifles using an infinite combinations of powders, charges, bullets, bullet weights, primers and seating depths with very little luck. I have the 6.5mm 140 vlds shooting well in my .260AI but other than that I have had no luck with Bergers and won't be using them any more, its too frustrating.
 
EnderW,

For distances out to 600m, both the SMK 175 and SMK 168 are great. Use whichever one is cheaper/more available/etc. If you are going to shoot further than that, the SMK 168s have problems but the SMK 175s are fine.

Scenars are extremely high quality bullets. The 155 Scenar is a very high performance bullet but it is quite specialized. It has a "fussy" sort of nose design, meaning that it might not shoot well in your rifle until you go through a *lot* of load testing and tuning that you probably have not had to with the SMKs (that is one of the really great things about SMKs, they are distinctly un-fussy bullets). The 155 Scenar also has an unusually long shank, which is not a bad thing but it does mean that unless your rifle's chamber has a fairly long throat (and I think Savage's .308 throats are pretty short), the seating position of the bullet will be suboptimal (you'll have to push the bullet quite deeply into the powder space). The 167 Scenar is more of a general purpose bullet, it will be less fussy than the 155 Scenar - it's more or less a Lapua equivalent of the SMK 168.

Berger makes some extremely high quality target bullets too, and recently they have been making some very "unfussy" bullet designs (I love the 155.5 Fullbore and the 155 Hybrids look very very good; the 185 BT is the standard FTR bullet). They are quite pricey. They are "better" bullets than the Sierra but quite honestly the Sierras (SMK 155, SMK 175 etc) shoot great out to 1000 yards and are capable of winning major matches, so you needn't feel at a disadvantage if you are shooting "just" Sierras.

As for velocities. Many match bullets will get extremely good accuracy at short range (300 and closer) with just about any muzzle velocity. Because of this you will frequently see extremely mild loads listed, with very good accuracy indicated.

Two problems with mild loads at distances greater than 600. One is that a slower bullet has a bit more wind deflection (though really not *that* much) than a faster bullet. The bigger problem is that mild loads tend to give less consistent muzzle velocity from one shot to the next. At longer range, this results in a difference in time of flight, which will show up as a vertical difference in the point of impact.

With long barrelled (30") target rifles it is typical to load 155 match bullets to 2925-2950fps ("normal, ordinary full power load"), 3000fps ("nice hot load"), or even 3050-3100fps ("very hot load; not necessarily unsafe if competently developed and tested").

If you are in the Toronto area and shooting at 300 yards (and well beyond!!!) interests you, contact the ORA and shoot with them. They have an excellent set of courses over the winter, if you're lucky there might even be a spot available (though they sell out quickly).
 
I shoot the 168 Berger Hybrid at these distance and I really like them. They will still go in the mag (barely) and have a great BC. They are also more cost effective then the Scenars.
 
In my Nemesis Vanquish, not a bullet can approach the performance of the 155 Lapua Scenars, they are just the best in my rifle... JP.
 
Thanks for the reply guys. I think i will stick with the smk's for now but the scenars are definately have peeked my interest. The bergers are harder to find and the scenars are cheaper than the smk's here.
 
With everyone on the 155.5 Berger, 155 VLD Berger, 155 SMK Palma, Scenar bandwagon that leaves a whole bunch of 155 gr Nolser J4 Competition bullets for me:dancingbanana:

These will shoot just as well or maybe a little better than 155 SMK's. I shoot whatever I can get my grubby hands on at the time is comes to loading for the season. Most 155's work very well and some are just 5hit. Tried 155 AMax one time could not get them to shoot. Tried them a few years later in another barrel and they shot like a laser at 300m (never tried them at any longer distances). Tried 155 gr Barnes Match Burners, lucky to hold the 4 ring on a DCRA target at any distance, total crap.

I never feel that I am at a disadvantage shooting Nosler's or SMK against guys shooting Bergers and Scenars. That being said I shot Scenars all last year.
 
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