Why is it that most sources will say that best accuracy is usually at the low end of the charge scale, when my own experience has been the opposite?In nearly every caliber I've loaded for the groups tended to pinch down right around the time to quit. In many cases loads that were obviously too warm out-shot the loads I had to settle for. Of course, hot or cold some loads just aren't going to shoot no matter what, but I see a different pattern than I read.
I'm not necessarily promoting hot loads, and at the risk of being accused of heresy don't necessarily believe that in most hunting situations the last bit of accuracy is even all that important. I'm just saying that I don't put much stock is the "Starting loads shoot better school of thought". I'm more of the "Powders are more consistant at the pressures they were designed to run at" thought pattern.
What has been the experience of the board? Are the manual writers so firmly locked into CYA mode that they are scared to say anything else?
I'm not necessarily promoting hot loads, and at the risk of being accused of heresy don't necessarily believe that in most hunting situations the last bit of accuracy is even all that important. I'm just saying that I don't put much stock is the "Starting loads shoot better school of thought". I'm more of the "Powders are more consistant at the pressures they were designed to run at" thought pattern.
What has been the experience of the board? Are the manual writers so firmly locked into CYA mode that they are scared to say anything else?