guess I will find out soon. the only chance I can shoot beyond 300 is @ the match which is less than a month from now.
There have been times when weather has stopped me from testing further. What I focus on is consistency in the grouping and most important the vertical dispersion.
At 200yds, you should be able to see variations of 0.1gr on your target wrt to vertical tuning. You should be as low as possible. 1/4 to 1/3 min tall should be achieveable with good brass prep and scales. The windage may be 1/2 min to 2/3 min but the bullets will land in a flat pattern. Looks like a football on its side... ideally, a line across the target center 2 bullets tall.
Then repeat that load and 0.1gr +/- over several range trips. Compare to the chronie data and pick the one with the best of all that you can test.
elevated pressures will not help you here. In all cartridges, there is a low, mid and high node before pressure signs becomes obvious. Most talk about the high node cause it sounds great on paper.... higher velocity should be less drift... better scores. Would work if you could keep the load in tune under match conditions. All too often, these loads are on a razor's edge and any change in effective load tuning and you have a train wreck. Typically, it looks like you can't find the center of the target as you go above and below at distance. I call this ping pong.... hit high, aim low, hit low, aim center, go somewhere else.
The windage may not look all that bad but the vertical can expand to 2MOA or more... the odds of hitting the target, not good. We get a bunch of PRS shooters while we are shooting F class matches in Washington. All the common chamberings and bullets, with all the common tuning problems. At 1000yds, you can see them chase their impacts all over that target - high and low. I am sure all have had very good SR tuning with great SD/ES... didn't mean a hill of beans on target.
Many top F class shooters have discovered that the mid node is where the good stuff lives. The nodes are typically wide, stable and behave themself over a wide range of temps. How about test at -5C in the winter... go to Arizona and set an NRA score record in 28C at 1000yds
Assume you are shooting the 308? there will be plenty of info on how to hot rod this chambering... I am far down this rabbit hole and have plenty of crappy relays to tell you, doesn't work. If you can't test and confirm at LR, I would suggest you work around book loads and velocities. Sure, you could get another 75fps with XYZ super duper load... if you can't confirm that tuning at distance, that 75fps will be the most frustrating "gain" you will have.
Currently shooting lots of 6.5 CM at LR and have helped a local shooter get going. he can only test at 440yds but that was plenty far enough to find that the mid node behaved the best (which is almost a 'max' print load). Cold bore at 975yds was almost a hit... just down wind. He had lots of hits all the way out to 1445yds. Vertical was almost non existant so I was able to center his group wrt to the winds and he was hitting SUB MOA targets. he did bring down some "better" loads which totally fell apart at distance. Quite eye opening when a super zapper load has 4 FT of vertical dispersion at distance....makes it real hard to hit milk jug size targets.
His best loads were around 6" vertical at 1445yds..... and he was putting hits on an 8 inch rock face. His magnetospeed suggests he is right at 2600fps which is slow... so what?
You can see pics and info on my facebook page... mystic precision inc.
If you can't confirm at distance, be conservative at SR... load towards the max loads in printed data and tune for the lowest vertical possible. It will drift more at distance BUT you can adjust for that because the next shot will follow your direction.
And that is how you put hits on target.
Jerry