HI Guys,
I have a new rifle that I am developing loads for. Winchester 1885 in 6.5 Creedmoor
Initial loads were bullet testing - Sierra Game King, Hornady Interlock, Hornady SST, Speer HotCor, all 140 grain
While the SGK was best (3 overlapping holes at 100 yards), the interlock was only slightly larger, and the SST and Hotcor were both around 1 inch.
went with the SGK. Today was testing seating depths. Made triplicate cartridges at 0.005" increments.
I found really large variations in group size. Shooting from longest to shortest cartridges groups went from 2" to 0.5" to 1.3" to 0.4" to 1.5" then back down to about 0.5" (to be fair I pulled a shot in the last group which I didn't count here). The big groups were of the 3-equally-spaced-holes variety. Not a tight pair and a flier. So, combined with the uniformly good groups with a range of bullets at a single seating depth makes me think these groups are 'real' and not just a fluke.
I'm not the most experienced reloader, but I have followed this routine a few times for more than a few rifles. I have never had swings this extreme for such small variations in seating depth.
Anyone seen this sort of thing before?
Was using 39 grains of H4350 in twice-fired nosler brass if that makes any difference.
Thanks
Fat
I have a new rifle that I am developing loads for. Winchester 1885 in 6.5 Creedmoor
Initial loads were bullet testing - Sierra Game King, Hornady Interlock, Hornady SST, Speer HotCor, all 140 grain
While the SGK was best (3 overlapping holes at 100 yards), the interlock was only slightly larger, and the SST and Hotcor were both around 1 inch.
went with the SGK. Today was testing seating depths. Made triplicate cartridges at 0.005" increments.
I found really large variations in group size. Shooting from longest to shortest cartridges groups went from 2" to 0.5" to 1.3" to 0.4" to 1.5" then back down to about 0.5" (to be fair I pulled a shot in the last group which I didn't count here). The big groups were of the 3-equally-spaced-holes variety. Not a tight pair and a flier. So, combined with the uniformly good groups with a range of bullets at a single seating depth makes me think these groups are 'real' and not just a fluke.
I'm not the most experienced reloader, but I have followed this routine a few times for more than a few rifles. I have never had swings this extreme for such small variations in seating depth.
Anyone seen this sort of thing before?
Was using 39 grains of H4350 in twice-fired nosler brass if that makes any difference.
Thanks
Fat


















































