I had an interesting experience today while shooting some handloads and could use some help.
I'm shooting a Savage .308 1:10 twist, using 168 gr. Berger VLD bullets, Winchester fire formed brass with Federal Match primers.. The cartridge is loaded to the maximum length the magazine will take, just under 2.89 COL. The powder is H4895.
I had loads made up at 41 gr., 42 gr, and 43 gr. of powder.
I zeroed the scope at 200m with the 41 gr loads and was getting good groups, holes touching. Then I switched to the 42 gr. loads. This produced the same grouping a bit less than an inch higher. Then I switched to the 43 gr. loads. This produced good groups , but they were 3 inches higher than the groups at 41 gr.
So, I'm trying to figure out what's happening here. I don't have a chronograph, but my intuition tells me that the 43. gr loads have significantly higher velocity than the other loads, thereby causing the large increase in elevation. But why is there such a large change between 42 and 43 grains and hardly any change between 41 and 42 gr.?
Which leads to the question; should I be spending my time loading at 41-42 grains looking for the best grouping, or should I explore the area around 43 grains. It seems to me that for longer range work the higher velocity would be advantageous so spending time testing for the sweet spot at 43+ grains would be in order.
Your thoughts ?
I'm shooting a Savage .308 1:10 twist, using 168 gr. Berger VLD bullets, Winchester fire formed brass with Federal Match primers.. The cartridge is loaded to the maximum length the magazine will take, just under 2.89 COL. The powder is H4895.
I had loads made up at 41 gr., 42 gr, and 43 gr. of powder.
I zeroed the scope at 200m with the 41 gr loads and was getting good groups, holes touching. Then I switched to the 42 gr. loads. This produced the same grouping a bit less than an inch higher. Then I switched to the 43 gr. loads. This produced good groups , but they were 3 inches higher than the groups at 41 gr.
So, I'm trying to figure out what's happening here. I don't have a chronograph, but my intuition tells me that the 43. gr loads have significantly higher velocity than the other loads, thereby causing the large increase in elevation. But why is there such a large change between 42 and 43 grains and hardly any change between 41 and 42 gr.?
Which leads to the question; should I be spending my time loading at 41-42 grains looking for the best grouping, or should I explore the area around 43 grains. It seems to me that for longer range work the higher velocity would be advantageous so spending time testing for the sweet spot at 43+ grains would be in order.
Your thoughts ?