Br
If 55/4350/130 which is just about max, is only giving 2,850 FPS, you may just have a "slow" 270, which seems to happen a lot with 270's. I doubt you'll see much of an increase with R22 or H4831, but, part of the fun in reloading is trying new things.
I'd let it alone. The deer you have yet to kill won't notice.
R-WEST
[This message has been edited by R-WEST (edited 02-27-2002).]
My guess is an honest 3000 fps is going to be tough to achieve in a 22" barrel. But at the same time, its not really neccessary either.
I believe God shoots a 270 and occasionally a 338.
quote:
I believe God shoots a 270 and occasionally a 338
Good one!!
R-WEST
Couldn't have said it better, except that he drives a scout and jams with Waylon
BR
With 130's, my 22" bbl'd 270 goes 3,090 fps with H4831sc and 3,150 fps with RL22.
I can't speak to IMR4350, but most agree slower powders tend to do better in the 270 with all weights.
I never have moved past H4831 or RL22 as the speed is there, the accuracy is awesome and with H4831sc "extereme" you have temperature stability in all seasons... and that's more important thean 60 fps!
I think if God has any interest in the 270, He certainly inspired the creation of H4831sc for it.
Speaking of "go to" powders, H4350 "extreme" is mine in the 338 Win Mag. I've never been able to cram enough H4831sc into the case to make 225's go as fast.
Brad
For you 270 shooters out there, these darn factory rounds will make you think you've forgotten how to reload. No kidding...
My standby load for the 270 is also 55 grains of IMR4350/130 grain Sierra Matchking. (For what it's worth, the Fed primers do tighten groups considerably with this recipe. I tried other primers, and found the Fed 210's to be the most consistent performers).
But the factory Winchester Super X 130's shoot just as well. Both shoot very consistent 1/2 MOA. No kidding... The Win stuff is only 10.78 a box at Walmart, too. I know two other people who have also been stunned by the accuracy of this factory round, so it isn't just my rifle.
Anyway, chrono the factory load, and see what you're getting from it. I pulled one apart and there is 59.3 grains of a ball type powder in there, so they are not underpowered.
As posted above, however, I simply wouldn't worry a whole lot about it. If the round is working, it's working. You may find a way to speed things up, but that won't guarantee better kills.
green 788
Not a sugnificant difference over 2850 and I gotta better chance of bullet failure. I wouldn't bother changing. that pile of deer will keep getting bigger, never fear. Atkinsons Rule: If it ain't broke, don't fix it...
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Ray Atkinson
I would doubt improving anything with IMR 4831 because it rarely improves on the pressure/velocity ratio of 4350.
.270's can vary a lot. My Sako gets 3200 FPS with just 58.5 grains of that same surplus 4831 Ray is using, and would absolutely bust a gut if I crammed 62 grains into it. A friends post-64 Winchester uses 60 grains with no problem. So, just be sure to tailor your loads to your particular gun.
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Larry
ZM
[This message has been edited by Zeke (edited 02-28-2002).]
I also tried H 4831 with the same bullet. Got up to 2970 fps but went to 1.5 " groups.
At 2900 fps it shoots 3/4" with 58.3 of H4831.
So I stayed with IMR 4350.
I tried one test with H4831 with the 150 Speer GS - did not chrony - best group of 1.1" at 57 grains. I'm pretty sure I can do better with a little work.
I hear the GS constuction has changed recently so based on what I have read on this site,and my experience with the Nosler Partition, I am going to try RL 22 with 150 Partitions when it warms up. If RL 22 doesn't work out it's back to H4831 and next on the list IMR 7828 (which works well in my 243 Win with a 100 Partiton)
I used the 210 Nosler Partition in my 338 last fall. Very impressed with the bullets performace. Starting out at 2850 fps - 300lB Muly at 300yds, Antelope at 230yds and 100lb Whitetail at 20 yds. The bullet just flat out performs.
I got a deal on "blemished" 150 Partitons from the Nosler Sportsman shop. I use these same "blemished" bullets in my 338 and 243 and I can't tell any difference in the way they shoot from the first quality bullets.
good luck
BR
I've found IMR-4831 to be the powder of choice for my .270s. H-4831 and RL-22 are also both excellent. Depending on your gun and components, you'll probably find a good 130 gr. load between 56-59 gr of IMR-4831 or 58-62 gr of H-4831/RL-22 (note these are top end loads, so work up to this range, don't start with the lower number). I've not much experience with IMR-4350 in the .270, but I've used it a bit in my .280 with 140s and it didn't impress me velocity wise, though accuracy was good. I thought I had a slow .270 once...it just turned out the darn thing had a real long throat..just never noticed because at the time I seated to recommended OAL and the darn thing was accurate as heck. In any case, I think you should be able to safely get close to or over 3100 fps with 130 gr bullets if you're so inclined (never seen a .270 that wouldn't given at least 22" of barrel). On the other hand, the deer didn't seem to notice the difference between 130 factory loads poking along at 2900 fps or so or my handloads at 3100+.
As you probably already know...each gun is unto itself. It never ceases to amaze me how much of a velocity difference (+/- 300 fps) I see reported by guys using identical loads that I've tried in the same length barrels in the same calibers.
Good Luck,
Lou