Getting some fire cracking already, raising pressure?
Seems awfully soon for that, though.
Seems awfully soon for that, though.
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I am gonna deep clean it and check. I went through my initial break-in where I shot one shot clean two shots clean three shots clean five shots clean and considered that broken in . it cleaned really well which is one of the reasons why I like benchmark barrels.Getting some fire cracking already, raising pressure?
Seems awfully soon for that, though.
GRT shows % burn… I've been saving my RL 26 for this cartridge and one other so I'm glad to know that this is working out.That is pretty exciting on an 18" barrel. I would have thought R26 was too slow for a barrel that short. Nice work
Your doing fine, but don't look for "velocity flat spots".... those don't exist.I thought I found a flat spot but when I went to verify it, I had an increase of ~ 20 ft./s.
No it isn't suppressed. Hunt from a blind with my wife. Much easier when we both use 18" barrelsLike you, I have R26 I have been saving for a special occasion. Glad it is working in such a short barrel. Is your rifle suppressed ? That cartridge performance is worth looking into.
Thanks. Mostly agree but if you dont have a stable velocity node…it wont hold at distance. Much of my rifles that are the most accurate at distance all have a velocity node over a few charges. But in the end I like a roundish group with same POI over several loads.Your doing fine, but don't look for "velocity flat spots".... those don't exist.
Focus on your targets and test at distance when you start to focus on finalizing your load.
The stability of the cold bore shots at the max distance are far more important than chrono numbers.
All those theories about "flat spots" are internet lore. It takes way too much space on here to explain why those don't exist and why it was a giant mistake for folks to chase chrono flat spots.
That is not the same as saying the velocity stats don't matter, but I am saying that if you shot enough samples of each powder step, your average line will smooth and flatten, while the ES/SD value is fluctuating around it a little. Use the chrono as a quality control measure on your loading, not as a pivot point on selecting the load.
After all, by definition, if your POI is steady and the groups are good at distance, then the velocity stats are "good enough". Clearly a poor ES won't hold a good waterline, but it can be very misleading to chase chronograph values over the target. Follow the target and let the chrono tag along. Far too often, the folks who chase "flat spots" get a let down. It is also true that often as not, the best tune does not have the best velocity stats.
Beautiful rig and I'm looking forward to seeing the field report from your hunts. It has been very difficult with tags in Colorado the last several years, and that '21 winter kill is still having lasting effects. Good Luck!
Not a chance, but there's still no way I'm selling my SCR 7 SAUMI wonder if the SAUM guys can match this