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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Load Analysis, Your assistance would be greatly appreciated
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<blockquote data-quote="Silly_Ghillie" data-source="post: 1570964" data-attributes="member: 107271"><p>I know this is probably arbitrary, but I have a few simple suggestions.</p><p>check your action screws and play with the torque and see if that changes anything, sometimes I have found that the harmonics of a load really depended on the mating tension of the action to the stock. take your best load and run a couple groups with 5 in/lb. reduced or added.</p><p>I also know that some commercial brass is horribly diverse with its internal volume- specifically federal. I don't know if you are weighing them or not- but I would try and get a couple set aside that are within a grain of each other and try those.</p><p>It was an earlier suggestion by someone else that it is a brass issue and I have a hunch that might be what it is. </p><p>that is what I would try if I were in your current position.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Silly_Ghillie, post: 1570964, member: 107271"] I know this is probably arbitrary, but I have a few simple suggestions. check your action screws and play with the torque and see if that changes anything, sometimes I have found that the harmonics of a load really depended on the mating tension of the action to the stock. take your best load and run a couple groups with 5 in/lb. reduced or added. I also know that some commercial brass is horribly diverse with its internal volume- specifically federal. I don't know if you are weighing them or not- but I would try and get a couple set aside that are within a grain of each other and try those. It was an earlier suggestion by someone else that it is a brass issue and I have a hunch that might be what it is. that is what I would try if I were in your current position. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Load Analysis, Your assistance would be greatly appreciated
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