Well, I went back to the drawing board after the advice I was given here. I haven't been able to work on my buddy's rifle however, I re-barreled a flat back Savage 116 with a 1:8 X-caliber carbon fiber 26" tube in 280AI about a month ago. The action and bolt were blueprinted years ago by Scott @S&S Gunsmithing in Driggs, ID. The stock is a bedded Mcmillan game warden. It was formerly a 300RUM. I finally had time Sunday to get to the range with it. Unfortunately, I didn't have my chrono or good rest. I made do with my old Caldwell rest. and a rear bag. Long story short, IMR 4895, RP Brass trimmed and prepped with Redding Master hunter dies, primer pockets uniformed, case mouth deburred and chamfered, WLR primers, 140 grain TTSX bullets .040 from the lands. I shot a powder ladder of 6 charges starting at 45 grains. None of the loads had pressure signs minus the 50 grain charge. The primer was slightly flattened. I shot a .365" 4 shot group @ 100 yards with the 46 grain charge and the 47 grain group was slightly larger but, still a good 5 shot group at just over .429. Temp was around 60 degrees w/ overcast. No wind. I think from here, I am going to load from 46-47 grains in .1 grain increments and do the OCW method.
I've been looking at annealers lately. Is there a decent annealer that is less than $500?
Edit: I also started crimping. I did a 1/2 crimp on these rounds. I will experiment with my chrono to see how the crimp affects my SD/ES. I'm curious on the necessity of crimping.
Jim
I've been looking at annealers lately. Is there a decent annealer that is less than $500?
Edit: I also started crimping. I did a 1/2 crimp on these rounds. I will experiment with my chrono to see how the crimp affects my SD/ES. I'm curious on the necessity of crimping.
Jim
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