The Flint&Fly Guy
Member
- Location
- Northern Alberta
So i loaded a pile of test rounds and headed to the range with my new rifle. (Weatherby 30-06)
I fired 3, 3 shot groups from the starting charge to the max charge .5grain apart. Also experimented with crimp vs no crimp, and then a couple 3shot groups repeated in the most promising spots.
All this gave me a load (the max load at that) that all 5, 3 shot groups were under 1/2moa (100yd)
So, happy with those results i went home and loaded up 100rnds, only to find out i messed up and my top load (the one i selected as best) was 57.4 and the book max is actually only 56.9! I guess i glanced at the wrong coloumn!
My question is should i pull all 100rnds and redo it or is the .5 not too much to worry abou a catastrophe happening? The accuracy of the load is great, the velocities high, but not crazy. (I thought it was due to the long barrel on the weatherby), and i never detected any pressure signs whatsoever.
Pull the loads, or don’t sweat it?
I fired 3, 3 shot groups from the starting charge to the max charge .5grain apart. Also experimented with crimp vs no crimp, and then a couple 3shot groups repeated in the most promising spots.
All this gave me a load (the max load at that) that all 5, 3 shot groups were under 1/2moa (100yd)
So, happy with those results i went home and loaded up 100rnds, only to find out i messed up and my top load (the one i selected as best) was 57.4 and the book max is actually only 56.9! I guess i glanced at the wrong coloumn!
My question is should i pull all 100rnds and redo it or is the .5 not too much to worry abou a catastrophe happening? The accuracy of the load is great, the velocities high, but not crazy. (I thought it was due to the long barrel on the weatherby), and i never detected any pressure signs whatsoever.
Pull the loads, or don’t sweat it?


















































