Mystic Precision
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Summerland, BC
75gr Amax or Berger VLD is max with a 9 twist Savage.
Jerry
Jerry
Hell now that i am thinking about it what if it simply equaled or bettered the 308 by 10% it could still be a smart move specially the mid distances.
To further amplify what Ian said - the .223/90 combo is NOT PROVEN. It is something that looks very promising on paper. There are a number of a reports that say that the 90s just don't seem to shoot at long range. There are a few reports (I only know of one) that say that they do. This means that it is an interesting and exciting thing for an experienced experimenter to try. Maybe one day, it will be a known and proven thing, in which case it'll be a great thing to recommend to all shooters. But that day is nowhere near.
The .308/155 (or 168 or 175) is a PROVEN, KNOWN combo. Getting it to shoot well is trivially boring. It's an *uninteresting* technical exercise. And that's why it has so much to recommend to the 99% of people who just simply want something that *WORKS*, at 100 yards, at 300 yards, at 600 yards, and at 1000 yards.
The .223/80 is known to work at 1000 yards, but it is much less established than the .308/155. It *can* be done, of course, but it is much more of a specialist proposition to do it right (for 1000 yard shooting) than a .308/155.
If you want to SHOOT, go with .308/155.
If you want to SHOOT, with low recoil and low cost, and you are an *experienced*, careful reloader, go with .223/80.
If you want to EXPERIMENT and DEVELOP something for it's own sake and/or for the good of shooting, choose .223/90.
To further amplify what Ian said - the .223/90 combo is NOT PROVEN. It is something that looks very promising on paper. There are a number of a reports that say that the 90s just don't seem to shoot at long range. There are a few reports (I only know of one) that say that they do. This means that it is an interesting and exciting thing for an experienced experimenter to try. Maybe one day, it will be a known and proven thing, in which case it'll be a great thing to recommend to all shooters. But that day is nowhere near.So, if your say
The .308/155 (or 168 or 175) is a PROVEN, KNOWN combo. Getting it to shoot well is trivially boring. It's an *uninteresting* technical exercise. And that's why it has so much to recommend to the 99% of people who just simply want something that *WORKS*, at 100 yards, at 300 yards, at 600 yards, and at 1000 yards.
The .223/80 is known to work at 1000 yards, but it is much less established than the .308/155. It *can* be done, of course, but it is much more of a specialist proposition to do it right (for 1000 yard shooting) than a .308/155.
If you want to SHOOT, go with .308/155.
If you want to SHOOT, with low recoil and low cost, and you are an *experienced*, careful reloader, go with .223/80.
If you want to EXPERIMENT and DEVELOP something for it's own sake and/or for the good of shooting, choose .223/90.
I don't know who you are, or what your shooting background is, and I don't understand your post. Are you purposely trying to discourage new shooters?
I 've only been reloading a relatively short time (5yrs) for my .308/175 1:11 and (1yr) for my .223/80 1:7. I have not yet competed, but have shot the .308 out to 800yds, and the .223 out to 900yds. I can keep all my hits within a 10" circle at 800yds (we were using paper plates stapled to the target). With the .223 at 900yds all shots were 4's or 5's with the occasional V Bull. i was quite happy for my first time shooting a .223 beyond 200yds.
I came to this particular thread to learn more about the VLD 90's. Apparently I'm wasting my time. I believe your post is detrimental to the DCRA and any provincial RA's that are struggling for new membership. What gives?
How in the blue f*ck are you going to prove it, successful or not, if your encouraging people not to try it??
Trying new things if half the reason most people start reloading.
"PMT" and "Rig Pig"
http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?t=378369
Daniel is a marksman of exceptional ability. If you want his curriculum vitae, you can start with this link. He also has a background in engineering and has devoted a great deal of his time dispensing advice to MANY new shooters along the way. Daniel is more than qualified and more than expereinced enough to speak with authority on shooting subjects.
I'm frankly disgusted by the tone and manner in which you two have decided to anonymously attack his comments and his integrity. If you have a valid question, exercise some common courtesy.
Ian Hames
Chase BC Canada
I don’t think Rig_pig and PMT meant anything rude. rnbra-shooter Is not as common of a voice as yourself and Mysticplayer are on CGN and some of us do not know his background and now we do. I was wondering the same thing
myself. I think they were wondering why his message was not more along the lines of “The 90 VLD’s are a difficult bullet to load for. People may not get them to work. The more people we have experiment the greater the odds are we will discover what works. If you want to try, give it a shot but don’t waste all your time because your efforts might be futile.”
I will say I am going to try out the 90 VLD’s. I am not as an experienced reloader as I would like to be but am willing to try. From rnbra’s advice I will not get dissatisfied if they do not work for me. I like shooting and tinkering so it won’t be a loss to me if they don’t work. If they do however, I will be sure to post my progress just like everybody else. I am also looking forward to future posts to get a good place to start.
was more satirical/rhetorical than invalid. The point was that Daniels post confused me. His response cleared that confusion.Are you purposely trying to discourage new shooters?
I seem to recall one of the Americans reporting that he tried a 1:7.7" (or maybe 1:7.5") and it worked. This was "surprising" to most, because most were assuming that 7" would not be enough. (There is a tendency, particularly among Americans, to be particularly conservative about twists, and use a quicker twist than is minimally needed).
There is an empirical formula by Miller, which I applied (actually I used JBM's version of it - http://www.jbmballistics.com/~jbm/cgi-bin/jbmstab-5.0.cgi ). The parameters I used there were 0.224" caliber, 90 grains, 1.263" bullet length (for Berger 90 VLD; I got this number from Litz's book), muzzle velocity 2800fps (you'd obviously get to use more), temp 59F, press 29.92" Hg. Using a twist of 7.7", the stability factor is 1.10 (stable, but marginal).
Using a twist of 8", the stability factor is 1.02, which is just too darn close to 1.0 to say whether it would or would not be stable (less than 1.0 means unstable, more than 1.0 means stable; but if there are any errors or uncertainties in the Miller formula, which there certainly are since it's only a convenient empirical formula).
I don't have a good feel for what velocities you might be able to get with a .22-.243/90; higher velocities help stability a *small* bit, but perhaps not enough. At 3100fps, the stability factor is 1.054, which is still right on the ragged edge.
Where are you located, and what is the lowest altitude that you will ever shoot your rifle, and what is the lowest temperature? Higher altitudes and higher temperature make the air lower denstity, which makes it easier to stablize bullets. If you're in Calgary, which I seem to recall is 1500' above sea level (so about 28.4" Hg), and you'll never be shooting in temperatures below 70F (e.g. a summertime target or varmint rifle), the Sg=1.13, which is probably good enough to say that it'll be stable.
Sorry fellas..... never meant to ruffle any feathers.
Anyway, more to the point of the story....
If one was going to use a 24 or 26" barrel on either a 22-243 or 22-250AI do you think you could get away with say with a slower twist?