Let me go over this in detail.
I loaded 20 rounds in Lapua brass (I really did 35, but forget about the second target for this example). The first five were just fowler shots that were also used to get me in proximity to the target. They were the middle charge. I fired those to foul the bore and then adjusted my zero to get the groups close to the bullseye, but not on it (didn't want to obscure it). From this point on, I NEVER touched the turrets.
Now, I have 15 rounds left. 3x 44.1, 3x 44.4, 3x 44.7, 3x 45.0 and 3x 45.3
I start shooting those at the target in a round robin sequence. This means I shot a 44.1 at tg#1, then a 44.4 at tg#2... then a 45.3 at tg#5 (one on each target). Then I start over at 44.1 on tg#1 again and repeat the sequence twice more. I always let the barrel cool between each and every round. I'm NOT shooting all the rounds for each charge all together. This is important. This way things like fouling and wind are distributed to each group and do not bias any one individual group.
I get this target:
Now, I examine the Target. I look for the scatter group. I see it at 44.4 gr. There should be 3 groups after it (in sequence) that have the center point in about the same location. And there they are: 44.7, 45.0, 45.3. I choose 45.0 as the OCW.
When I plot the center point on a chart (to make them more visual), I get this, which also includes higher charge weights that I left out of this example:
Notice the loop these charges from and the associated velocities.
Now, just for fun (and because I have different brands of brass) I ran the numbers in Quickload and figured out what charges gave the same velocities in Hornady brass. I do the OCW sequence again and get this:
See the scatter group at 45.2. Here the OCW is at 45.8. Makes sense, Hornady brass has a larger internal capacity. My center point plot looks like this:
Notice the loop is formed by the same velocities?
If I put them together on the same chart:
They land in virtually the same location. I have found the OCW for a given load with two different brands of brass. The fact that it is not only repeatable, but repeatable with different brass speaks volumes.