As per the other thread that you posted in, you could see that guy worked up his load with the components he used. Pretty standard practice in hand loading is to work up from start level loads to where you want to be - do not just pick a "random" load for somewhere. Any time that you change a component - bullet, brass, primer, lot of powder - then it is prudent to back up and start over with "working up".
Look at information in loading manuals - what brand brass did they use? What brand and type of primer? What brand and weight of bullet? If you change any one of those, no reason to expect that your load performs the same as their's did, and they were not testing in your rifle anyway - you are. If you are "forced" to change a component, then pretty much expect to back up and "work your way" up again. It might result in no change, or a change in desired accuracy, or a change in pressure levels.
And, as mentioned in that other post, is perhaps a difficult concept for a hand loader with 100 bullets, 100 primers and one pound of powder, who loads up 5 or 10 rounds and goes hunting. Had better follow the manuals pretty close, and start with Start loads. Once you have gone through a couple thousand primers, and kept records of each load, you probably gain some experience at which changes result in which results, but you are into "new territory" with a "new-to-you" rifle, bullet, case or primer... And therefore all of your previous "experience" may not apply to this "new-to-you" set-up.