Now with pictures! I made it out to the range again today. As a reminder, the rifle is a Remington 700 BDL in 270 Winchester that I bought second hand. The ammo are hand-loads; today I shot 5-shot groups with 51, 52, and 53 grains of H414 behind a 130 grain Hornady Interlock, ignited by CCI primers. Then I repeated the groups in the other direction. I was not entirely fastidious about letting the barrel cool fully between groups, but gave it some rest. The six targets are:
Group sizes might be hard to read off the photo...
51 grains --- 2.5" (top left)
52 grains --- 2" (top centre)
53 grains --- 1.75" (top right)
53 grains --- 2.5" (bottom right)
52 grains --- 1.75" (bottom centre)
51 grains --- 3" (bottom left)
Strangely, the 53 grain load that was best on the first round had a totally different shape on the second round. So, to combine the two 5-shot groups into a 10-shot group for each load, I traced the holes onto a fresh target with different colours (blue and black are hard to tell apart, though...)
Now I measure
51 grains --- 3"
52 grains --- 2.25"
53 grains --- 2.875"
I did not manage to talk anyone else into shooting strict groups with my handloads (I guess that's a risky thing to do for a stranger---not sure I'd want to shoot anyone else's handloads, when it comes right down to it...)
Anyway, based on those targets, and my non-existent bank account, what does the collected wisdom of the CGN think I should do? Sand off the pressure point in the barrel, look into glass bedding kits, see how much a gunsmith would charge for a trigger lightening job, or just load up a couple hunnert of the 52 grain loads and start some serious practice from field positions? I have close to 4 lbs of powder and 300 primers and bullets in my reloading bench, so the latter would be cost-free (except for gas to get to the range...)