55 grain v max varget load

rocket420

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In my manuals the lowest start load is 25 grains and the highest max load is 27.8.
I loaded some from 25 to 26 in .2 increments
I got a new hornady manual today and it has a starting load 22.8 and max 26.4

Am i safe to start at 25 grains? or should i load some lower?
 
Personally I would start low and work up and watch for signs of over pressure/accuracy. I have three different loading manuals and all are so different in recommending loads it is amazing.

So many variables and starting with conservative loads is what is smart.
 
25 works for me.
Hornady always starts low.
Some times I shoot good some days bad.
25 seems just right.
My 2 cents
 
I'm assuming you're shooting 223? (22-250 and 243 are the others) I use 26.6 gr of varget under the 55 vmax. It's a compressed load. It was the most accurate in my gun. I never tried anythig higher after load testing. The highest I tried was 27.2 gr and that's been over 2 years now, so 25gr would be a safe load. YMMV.

-Jason
 
rocket420

The .223 has a rated chamber pressure of 52,000 cup or 55,000 psi.

The Lyman manual lists 25 grains of Varget as a start load at 34,700 cup and a max load of 27.8 at 51,400 cup and it is a compressed load with a 55 grain bullet. It gives two sets of load data one with a universal test barrel and receiver and a AR15 rifle.

The universal test barrel and receiver uses a copper crusher pellet and when a specific firearm is listed a strain gauge is glued to the firearm. Bottom line, the firearm or test method used effects the pressure data. When you have many manuals you look at the data and average your test loads until you find out what your firearm likes.

Any component change and firearm used can cause the pressure data to vary, as an example Winchester cases can be lighter than Remington and this can change the data.

Using your primers to read pressure signs on a .223/5.56 is guesswork at best because the various primers have different thicknesses. All my handloads are a lower pressure than the rated chamber pressure for that firearm, reloading is like playing Black Jack, stay light and beat the dealer.

Make a work up load and watch your cases and primers as the pressure increases, once the primers are not protruding and the necks are soot free your are between a mid range load and maximum. From there up in pressure you pay more attention to pressure signs and the average max load data and decide on a stopping point. The max load and the stopping point are up to you to decide by reading your cases for pressure signs and the data in the manuals. This is an educated guess because YOU do not have pressure measuring equipment. For what it is worth the majority of factory ammunition is loaded well below max rated chamber pressure and your case will last much longer when YOU are conservative in your loading.
 
Not that I recommend it but I don't think you could get enough varget behind a 50-55gr bullet to cause failure of the firearm ... My 26.8 is near the top of the cases and shoots like a dream
 
Not that I recommend it but I don't think you could get enough varget behind a 50-55gr bullet to cause failure of the firearm ... My 26.8 is near the top of the cases and shoots like a dream

This is most likely true I have had 27.5gr with a 53gr vmax. No pressure signs and the powder was at the top of the case. It was really compressed even when loaded to my mag length of 2.392"
 
I don't see anything about a 22 Hornet?

I load 26.5grains of Varget for both 53 & 55 gr V-max. The 53gr are very accurate in my Savage

exactly

I don't see anything about a 223Rem, a 222Rem, a 219Bee, a 243Win... well you get my point


no point asking for load data when the cartridge is NOT given... anything that was offered was not worth the paper it was...er.. well...

so, how can anyone give load date opinions when the cartridge is not known?
 
I couldn't imagine getting any more than 26.5 grn of Varget into a 223rem case. It's pretty much filled to the top and when seating the bullets it's crushing the powder. I loaded 100 50 grn V-Max 223rem yesterday with this exact powder and quantity. Let 6 fly today and the ammo functioned flawlessly.
 
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