Load Development - Help Wanted

Tinman, great to hear from you. I hope that old turk mauser I sent you is getting good use.

I am really enjoying my new Tikka and working up a load for her. I do wish powder was more available as my choice is very limited. That said, ill happily hunt with this load and I think you may be right, I am getting to know my rifle. This trigger breaks really nice and crisp and is quite light. I have not found a need to adjust it from whatever the factory setting is. Ill play a bit more with it and see where I end up.

Cheers

Mike

Hey mike,

The old Turk is at a friends waiting for some life saving surgery. Funny story but it was the first rifle that I handloaded for and I had terrible problems with accuracy. I tried different charges, bullet weights and primers but I couldn't get that rifle to shoot well.

Long story short after months of shooting, scrubbing and yet more shooting I realized something. The bore about 1 1/2" from the muzzle had a dark "ring" in the rifling.

The barrel has a buldge in it from what I gather was an obstruction of some kind being shot out of the barrel.

Anyhow, the gun will get a counterbore hopefully this summer and with any luck accuracy will be half decent. I'm glad I bought that rifle as I learnt valuable insight about how a barrel works and the effects of a bad spot of rifling on bullet stablization and accuracy.

Steve
 
Been my experience that most accurate loads are above max published. I usually get an acceptable node as I approach listed max and when I was younger, I stopped at max, and then went back down. As I learned about pressure signs and talked with mentors, I began to realize that there were better nodes a little higher.
Compromise becomes in what you want to stand up to for recoil and punishment on the rifle.
 
Mike.

I am working past Barnes Max charge now by 1 grain, and have a 5 shot group right at 1 MOA, no signs of high pressure. Do I stop here, or refine just above and below
At 1MOA for 5 from a stout recoiling light barreled sporter, you are definately moving into a accuracy node.
The thing to do now is establish the top and bottom of that node and then set your charge in the middle.
This gives you some welcome repeatability and consistency as shooting conditions are changing over time.
If you settle on a charge at the top or the bottom edge of that node, it doesn't take much to fall out and start to scatter(relatively) shots ... leaving you scratching yer head wondering why the rifle don't shoot like it used to.
Often, in my experience, a node is about a half grain wide in small/mid cap. cart's, on up to a grain or so in larger cart's like your 7 mag.
Were it me, I'd load 3 each at 58.7, 59, 59.3, 59.6 grains, to help define that particular node.
Then, I'd go up in pressure and see if there is a higher safe node ... firing single shots, +1/2 grain at a time, to find your own rifles true comfortable max. (more than half-flattened primers in FF'd brass, more than 2 thou. of case stretch, ejector marks on the casehead, harder bolt lift, loosening primer pockets ('cept'n in butter soft Horn. brass) after a few firings ... Any of the above should scream "over max".)
Measuring case head expansion at the web is also a good method to keep track of relative pressure.
Do back off a couple grns and go from there if any of the above signs do occur.

It has often been the case in my world, that the highest safe node is the the best shooter.

As I learned about pressure signs and talked with mentors, I began to realize that there were better nodes a little higher.
Compromise becomes in what you want to stand up to for recoil and punishment on the rifle.
This^.
For me, if my lapua brass is still tight in the primer pocket after 20 reloads, and trimming is not needed often ... 'tis not too hot. :rockOn:
 
Last edited:
Sure looks like it likes the higher FPS with that last one, those first few, the paper almost looked like it was tumbling or not stabilizing with the sideways rips in the paper.
 
Back
Top Bottom