Ref 8 ft rods for the Oehler. Answer is not one 8 ft rod, rather two 4 ft with one $1 electrical tubing connecter. All fits in your case.
The ladder is not for every rifle or shooter. this is an extreme accuracy method for extremely accurate shooters and guns. This is not for your 1 MOA grandpa's deer rifle.
If your gun or you are not capable of shooting .5 MOA then shoot 200 rounds to find a 1 MOA group. Or for that matter any other technique.
The reason you go to 300 or 400 yards in a no wind condition, is that an accurate gun with any load will stack all 10, 20 or 30 shots of a ladder easily under .75 at 100. It is physically impossible to track the bullet movement up the ladder (hint hint, that is why it is called a ladder). You must be able to see and track individual bullet impacts.
a ladder properly done will take your load data up through the upper end of the pressure curve for that gun and load. That is something that will not be found in reading one or four reloading manuals, because they will easily be 10% under max for most guns and custom actions will lose much more.
this technique does several things if you have an accurate gun and use some common sense.
Start with 20-30 rounds and go well into the upper range on powder. You want to hit the upper limit of pressure.
Load your bullets into the lands (or max seating depth for the mag OAL) IF you want max accuracy and do not worry about a magazine. Why is that? Well into the lands (or max OAL) gives you max pressure and when you move seating depths you only have one way to go an as you come out the pressure goes down.
You will need an accurate chrono, paper to plot your impacts and a zero target along with the ladder target (white posterboard works well) with black dot/cross for aiming. Plus 4-5 rounds at the lowest powder charge to zero on the other target. Good idea to be 1-2" high of aim point.
Put small dot on ladder target, and shot one round. Plot impact on sheet at bench. Write down MV beside each shot number.
Wait one minute repeat with round (charge two). repeat repeat until the last shot.
If you cannot accurately plot impacts on sheet, every 3-5 ( or if you have to each shot) rounds walk down to the target. look and mark on the target and your sheet.
have micrometer handy as you go up the ladder. Measure case expansion above the web and watch for pressure signs, ie highly flattened primers, sticky bolts, over .001 case expansion. If you get high pressure signs, then stop there.
Voila, you have just hit the upper limit of pressure and know exactly where it is. Normally the powder charge will will be higher (sometimes as much as 2-3 gr in med mags) than the manual.
Look at all your data and targets. Where does the MV stabilize for 3-4 shots? Those shots will probably coincide with where the same 3-4 bullets impacted closely together. That is node for that barrel, bullet, powder, primer and case combo. Change one component and it will not be the same. Basic reloading 101. You will find with a 20-30 shot ladder that you will have 2 maybe 3 good nodes.
Pick the node that is in the MV range you want. Do not pick the extreme upper or lower end of that range for that node for your powder. You want to have room for temp variations. Good time to mention I only use powders that are known not to be temp sensitive.
Go home and load 3-5 shot groups of that spread by .1gr increments with same seating depth and .010 off increments. Also same neck tension. You will have 3-4 groups at each .1gr and each .010.
VLDs tend to shoot better in the lands, so I always start in about .020. Regular bullets like Sierras tend to shoot better off, so I always start just touching.
Shoot these groups at 300/400 (no wind condition) over chrono. This will confirm original MV range, SD, ES etc along with grouping. This test will determine final powder charge and give you a .015 range for the seating depth.
Repeat test with .002 increments of seating and couple variations on neck tension if you have bushing dies.
You have fired 60-80 rds total and got your final load each and every time normally. You have 2 maybe 3 short range sessions.
Sometimes I repeat the ladder with another powder or bullet.
BH