I very much appreciate you taking the time to write….ive reloaded for a long time but it's more for enjoyment n my own use when I have time n I haven't learned as much as you did in 2 years
Good job
Good job
I'm going to add to your list.Whelp, it was a bit over two years ago that I made my first few posts here. I was intending to detail my first semi-custom build and the trials and tribulations that followed. I didn't quite make good on that goal, although I may go back some day soon and try.
But...
I figured I'd outline a few things I think I know. I still maintain I'm a paint sipping, window licking, mouth breather...and two years is not a long time in this game. I still learn new things and find myself throwing things I thought I knew out the window on a weekly basis.
- You can't buy accuracy.
- I spent thousands on a semi-custom rifle that was almost immediately out shot by a tikka that I built for a friendly competition.
- I've purchased quite a few pre-fits from well regarded manufacturers and none shoot as well as the take off tikka barrel I twisted on to a used tikka action.
- Pre-fit barrels are a crap shoot.
- Having a gunsmith chamber and thread a barrel to your action is a crap shoot with slightly better odds.
- Barrels are like people, some just eat crayons.
- Barrels from some families are less prone to eating crayons. But every family makes a unicorn every so often.
- I still think and act like I can buy accuracy.
- Faster magnums are hard to tune.
- Its just my experience that bigger, faster, magnum cartridges are inherently a bit more finicky.
- 28 nosler, 26 nosler, even 6.5 PRC are awesome rounds. They can be very accurate obviously. But the road to getting there seems to be a bit more windy than slower cartridges with less boom in them.
- Shooting a 180 grain projectile at 3600 fps is more fun than a 147 grain projectile at 2800 fps however.
- Consistency is accuracy, and larger group samples more accurately capture how consistent a gun is shooting.
- Not to ruffle feathers, and not to say you're doing anything wrong. But in my experience a ten shot group tells me more than a 3 shot group.
- I plan and shoot accordingly during load development. I load in 10 shot increments and make
- I believe making changes to a load based on a 3 or even 5 shot group will find you chasing your tail more often than not.
- A string of 5 3 shot groups, is a 15 shot group when viewed as a whole.
- As a rule I try not to chase numbers to a large extent in terms of sd/es or group size. If I'm in the ball park of 30 es and say 12 sd over 10 to 20 shots, I'm satisfied.
- Most people make load development more complicated than it needs to be.
- I've noticed powder/bullet combination is more important than powder charge/seating depth.
- I can't tune a crappy powder/bullet combo to shoot well.
- A proper combination is ALMOST not worth tuning.
- If it shoots well, the time and effort spent wringing out tighter groups, or better es/sd numbers can be a fools errand.
- My reloading bench is overflowing with powders/bullets due to this fact.
- Listening and researching what works for others is key.
- For every cartridge there will be loads that most people favor, there is a reason for that.
- Experimentation outside of this fact CAN result in some great results, but WILL result in statement 3.2 being true.
- Monolithic bullets are harder to tune than traditional bullets.
- I have some decent copper loads, but all of them were harder to come by than their cup and core counterparts.
- A decent trigger is ABSOLUTELY key.
- I would wager that a good trigger lends itself to better accuracy than throwing an extra few hundred bucks into your scope budget.
- SOME factory triggers can be tuned to a perfect thing of beauty, but it will take time and effort.
- Standardized SAAMI chambers are for standard cartridge configurations.
- Longer bullet? Monolithic Bullet? Consider very carefully the chamber dimensions and know that SAAMI chambers aren't usually going to cut it.
- Plain white paint tastes better than most any other color.
There's more, but I just saw a squirrel and I need to gather some more paint chips for breakfast.
I halfway agree, and I do tune for seating depth. BUT, some rifles that don't like some projectiles in my experience. Most initial bullet testing I do in two seating depths. If I don't see anything promising at either depth I usually move on.I agree with some of your comments and disagree with others. Seating depth is where final tuning takes place and is extremely critical to load development.
One more thing to add is that if you are testing without wind flags you are wasting your time.
Agreed, as you learn the nuance with each rifle, intuition can kick in. I do feel like larger sample sizes at the outset, leads to less overall rounds during development. And I second guess myself less having more confidence in my data.The number of groups to confirm become smaller with the experience with the particular firearm you're working with. I may only fire 2 rounds if I know it wasn't a pulled shot or something if I'm working with a rifle that I'm used to.
lol I second your observationsWhelp, it was a bit over two years ago that I made my first few posts here. I was intending to detail my first semi-custom build and the trials and tribulations that followed. I didn't quite make good on that goal, although I may go back some day soon and try.
But...
I figured I'd outline a few things I think I know. I still maintain I'm a paint sipping, window licking, mouth breather...and two years is not a long time in this game. I still learn new things and find myself throwing things I thought I knew out the window on a weekly basis.
- You can't buy accuracy.
- I spent thousands on a semi-custom rifle that was almost immediately out shot by a tikka that I built for a friendly competition.
- I've purchased quite a few pre-fits from well regarded manufacturers and none shoot as well as the take off tikka barrel I twisted on to a used tikka action.
- Pre-fit barrels are a crap shoot.
- Having a gunsmith chamber and thread a barrel to your action is a crap shoot with slightly better odds.
- Barrels are like people, some just eat crayons.
- Barrels from some families are less prone to eating crayons. But every family makes a unicorn every so often.
- I still think and act like I can buy accuracy.
- Faster magnums are hard to tune.
- Its just my experience that bigger, faster, magnum cartridges are inherently a bit more finicky.
- 28 nosler, 26 nosler, even 6.5 PRC are awesome rounds. They can be very accurate obviously. But the road to getting there seems to be a bit more windy than slower cartridges with less boom in them.
- Shooting a 180 grain projectile at 3600 fps is more fun than a 147 grain projectile at 2800 fps however.
- Consistency is accuracy, and larger group samples more accurately capture how consistent a gun is shooting.
- Not to ruffle feathers, and not to say you're doing anything wrong. But in my experience a ten shot group tells me more than a 3 shot group.
- I plan and shoot accordingly during load development. I load in 10 shot increments and make
- I believe making changes to a load based on a 3 or even 5 shot group will find you chasing your tail more often than not.
- A string of 5 3 shot groups, is a 15 shot group when viewed as a whole.
- As a rule I try not to chase numbers to a large extent in terms of sd/es or group size. If I'm in the ball park of 30 es and say 12 sd over 10 to 20 shots, I'm satisfied.
- Most people make load development more complicated than it needs to be.
- I've noticed powder/bullet combination is more important than powder charge/seating depth.
- I can't tune a crappy powder/bullet combo to shoot well.
- A proper combination is ALMOST not worth tuning.
- If it shoots well, the time and effort spent wringing out tighter groups, or better es/sd numbers can be a fools errand.
- My reloading bench is overflowing with powders/bullets due to this fact.
- Listening and researching what works for others is key.
- For every cartridge there will be loads that most people favor, there is a reason for that.
- Experimentation outside of this fact CAN result in some great results, but WILL result in statement 3.2 being true.
- Monolithic bullets are harder to tune than traditional bullets.
- I have some decent copper loads, but all of them were harder to come by than their cup and core counterparts.
- A decent trigger is ABSOLUTELY key.
- I would wager that a good trigger lends itself to better accuracy than throwing an extra few hundred bucks into your scope budget.
- SOME factory triggers can be tuned to a perfect thing of beauty, but it will take time and effort.
- Standardized SAAMI chambers are for standard cartridge configurations.
- Longer bullet? Monolithic Bullet? Consider very carefully the chamber dimensions and know that SAAMI chambers aren't usually going to cut it.
- Plain white paint tastes better than most any other color.
There's more, but I just saw a squirrel and I need to gather some more paint chips for breakfast.
This has really become apparent to me as I've moved out to longer ranges (1000 yds+) I find it difficult to shoot light weight guns in magnum cartridges at long range as well as smaller cartridges.One thing to note is the rifle weight and cartridge size. Like 10lb .223/6.5 CM tikka is going to outshoot any custom 7lb $6k 300 win mag. You can't buy accuracy for sure. You have to build it into the rifle, with recoil management in regards to the rifle weight.