- Location
- The Conservative part of Ontario
This thread is to get people thinking about what they are doing. Investigate that load, study the results on paper, but look beyond that. Look at the case, look at the bore, look at the snow in front of your shooting position. Try to decipher what went wrong, and fix it, understand!.
What goes on in the case when you pull the trigger?
The primer fires, the powder burns, and the bullet moves, simple right?
But there are so many tiny variables that make internal ballistics interesting.
In a big case, is there so much powder room that the powder was well away from the primer?
What happens if I compress this powder?
Why do they have a recommended minimum charge?
Did heat and pressure build enough that the powder burned completely?
Did the bullet move easily, reducing pressure by increasing the volume?
If you are using a plain base lead bullet, was the powder used expanding the bullet base and sealing the bore, or was it pushing
past the bullet deforming it, and causing bad groups and or leading?
Is the cast bullet soft enough? Is it hard enough for the velocity you are trying to reach?
What about OAL? What's that stand for anyway?
If your feed will accept it, can you get closer to the lands with that bullet?
How does the bullets ogive design affect OAL with regard to it's proximity to the lands?
When is faster powder better than a slower one, and vice versa.
Why if you go to the range with five different powders loaded under the same bullet, in the same cases, with the same primer are the groups so very different?
What goes on in the case when you pull the trigger?
The primer fires, the powder burns, and the bullet moves, simple right?
But there are so many tiny variables that make internal ballistics interesting.
In a big case, is there so much powder room that the powder was well away from the primer?
What happens if I compress this powder?
Why do they have a recommended minimum charge?
Did heat and pressure build enough that the powder burned completely?
Did the bullet move easily, reducing pressure by increasing the volume?
If you are using a plain base lead bullet, was the powder used expanding the bullet base and sealing the bore, or was it pushing
past the bullet deforming it, and causing bad groups and or leading?
Is the cast bullet soft enough? Is it hard enough for the velocity you are trying to reach?
What about OAL? What's that stand for anyway?
If your feed will accept it, can you get closer to the lands with that bullet?
How does the bullets ogive design affect OAL with regard to it's proximity to the lands?
When is faster powder better than a slower one, and vice versa.
Why if you go to the range with five different powders loaded under the same bullet, in the same cases, with the same primer are the groups so very different?


















































