I like your thinking, as soon as I can afford to upgrade I'll go 338 or more unlikely a 50. Seems the hotter the load, the better it shoots. I guess you have to draw the line somewhere though. Next loads I'm trying are using a 190 gr Berger......easier to predict drop than wind effects.
Thanks for the input.
That's often the case. Keep safe and prudent of course.
That does sound like a very hot load, but it *might* be OK for you.
- what brass are you using? (how much does it weigh)
- How long are you loading the bullets? (Remington .308s usually have long and somewhat sloppy throats)
If your primer pockets are loosening, that's a sure sign that you're too hot.
If you want high performance at long range, the most effective way to pursue that is with a higher performance bullet. A Berger 185LRBT or Hybrid immediately springs to mind (very high performance, and a very 'easy' bullet to get to shoot well). If you are interested in even more exotic bullets, consider the Berger 215 Hybrid or 230 Hybrid. Dunno what the twist rate is in your rifle (it might or might not handle these). But the very long Remington throat would be working in your favour. You won't be able to feed them from a magazine, but who cares.
I was just screwing around with a ballistics program and going by my POI at 400 yards MV looks like 2700ish. Alliant claims it's a stable powder in terms of hot and cold temperature, but hands on info is the best. Thanks c4pyro.
Nice avatar
You do what you can with what you've got, of course, but back-figuring speed from drop is a very sensitive to small errors (e.g. is it 400 yards or 405 yards? What is the actual size of your scope's so-called 'minutes'? What was the air temperature on the day you tested? To what precision do you know the location of the centre of your group at 400 and your group at 100?)
BTW 2700-ish does sound like more or less what you're probably getting.