Situation: New to me (inherited from my dad in 1991, I've never fired it) .22-250 Remington 700 Varmint mid-'80s vintage, new Riton RT-S Mod 5 GEN2 4-16x50 scope, WW760 powder, 500 pieces of new Jag brass plus ~200 pieces of assorted brass, Federal primers, 55 grain Nosler Varmagedden bullets. I am going on a prairie dog shoot in early June and all my local ranges are closed down and will probably remain closed until after I get back. I mounted the scope using a scope level and I am confident it is done correctly. I have used my optical bore sighter which in the past has gotten me to within two - three clicks of where I need to be. I know of some places I can go with minimal danger from the Thought Police, but need to limit my shots as much as possible. I can trust myself to shoot well. I have a
Magnetospeed Sporter Barrel Mount Chronograph. I am aware that hanging anything on the barrel will change the POI, although, this is a bull barrel...
Target: For someone who is familiar with the cartridge and the powder/bullet combination I have available, what would you recommend I do to (1) get the rifle sighted in (normally takes me three to six shots with an accurate load) while (2) finding a reasonably accurate load (1/2 MOA would be a nice goal, if the rifle will do it) all with taking the minimum number of shots. I can do very accurate powder measuring. I am thinking of starting with 37.5 grains and from talking with friends and reading my reloading manuals, it looks like I don't want to exceed 38.5 grains. It would be best if I made up my test rounds at home. I have a collet bullet puller so I can break down unsatisfactory rounds and reload. In a normal situation I would take my powder scale and load on the shooting bench at the range but this is not possible.
Proposal: ?? I have some ideas but if anyone has done this I am all ears! Thanks in advance.