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Have you ever had dramatic changes in accuracy with .2 of a grain upd info

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22 November 2012, 15:06
Tailgunner
Have you ever had dramatic changes in accuracy with .2 of a grain upd info
General thoughts
3 shots won't prove a load, BUT it sure can cause it to be rejected from further consideration. A small 3 shot may get bigger with more shots, but a large 3 shot damn sure won't shrink.
My personal method is to use 3 shot groups for the primary workup, than retest those that show the most promise with 5 shot groups, with a 10 round group as final proof for the best of the best.

Scales, there is a difference between accuracy and repeatability. Accuracy (what is "guaranteed") is how close it is to a standard. Repeatability is how close it reweighs every time.
For reloading purposes repeatability trumps accuracy. That is to say a scale that averages +/-0.00 but varies by +/-0.5 is useless due to repeatability, but one that's off by 0.5 but repeats to +/-0.00 is highly useable.
22 November 2012, 16:04
Wstrnhuntr
Finicky... popcorn



AK-47
The only Communist Idea that Liberals don't like.
01 December 2012, 14:45
RvS
Have you thought about the bullet being the problem. I switched bullets brands in same weight and had difficulty getting satisfactory results. Perhaps the bearing surface of a particular projectile is what makes it require exacting tolerances for satisfactory results.

It's just a suggestion, and I'm always right! Whistling old


Same hole I think!
02 December 2012, 01:40
ramrod340
The once or maybe twice I had a very small difference drastically improve a group I was unable to repeat it.


As usual just my $.02
Paul K
02 December 2012, 19:31
RMiller
Not that I recall. Then again I dont load less than .5 grain difference.


--------------------
THANOS WAS RIGHT!
05 December 2012, 09:59
rodell
quote:
Originally posted by GSSP:
Mike,

.2 gr? Depending upon the powder scale; +/- .1 gr accuracy, could the spread be larger than .2 gr? Possibly .3 gr? Then I could see a difference. I wonder if the accuracy node is too small to keep using the same powder. Might be difficult to keep it within the same accuracy node depending upon weather, loading techniques, component consistency. Just a thought!

Now, if you have an Acculab VIC 123 or something as accurate that measure +/- two 100th of a grain.......?

Alan


I agree that .2 grain is too narrow unless you are willing to tune it for temperature. The load can't be very tolerant of pressure changes for any reason, including primer or brass inconsistency.

I had a Cooper .223 that would do the one hole thing at a particular charge. Any movement off that charge opened it up. Instead of using that I found a more tolerant load and then tuned seating depth to get back to the original group.
06 December 2012, 02:05
RvS
quote:
Originally posted by rodell:
quote:
Originally posted by GSSP:
Mike,

.2 gr? Depending upon the powder scale; +/- .1 gr accuracy, could the spread be larger than .2 gr? Possibly .3 gr? Then I could see a difference. I wonder if the accuracy node is too small to keep using the same powder. Might be difficult to keep it within the same accuracy node depending upon weather, loading techniques, component consistency. Just a thought!

Now, if you have an Acculab VIC 123 or something as accurate that measure +/- two 100th of a grain.......?

Alan


I agree that .2 grain is too narrow unless you are willing to tune it for temperature. The load can't be very tolerant of pressure changes for any reason, including primer or brass inconsistency.

I had a Cooper .223 that would do the one hole thing at a particular charge. Any movement off that charge opened it up. Instead of using that I found a more tolerant load and then tuned seating depth to get back to the original group.


Well done. I like it when a Reloader uses reasoning in his process! I commend you! clap


Same hole I think!
06 December 2012, 05:16
Fjold
My 22.250 with .2 grain powder variations




Frank



"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953

NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite

06 December 2012, 06:20
wasbeeman
How many times did that difference repeat itself?


Aim for the exit hole
06 December 2012, 18:07
vines
quote:
I made 7 different loads starting from 44.6 thru 45.8 grains of varget in .2 grain increments.


i usually dont load in .2 grain increments. i start at .5 in most short actions. But no. see no improvement with .2 i have had loads that would shoot .50 today and shoot it again tomorrow and get .950 if i can shoot an avarge .750 load in 3 different days. thats a good load for hunting.