Berger 140 hybrid
So did you work up to that 42.5grn weight? That's a pretty stiff weight for that brass. How did the lower weights work?
How long is your barrel and what twist? How far off the lands are you?
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Berger 140 hybrid
You might also try different seating depths. That would be my suggestion. Do you know your distance from bullet ogive to the rifling (lands)? With the modern longer bullets they often like 30 thousandths gap or more. So you might try adjusting your coal to shorter or longer by .005 or .010. Hard to make a recommendation without the details. I most often run .025 to .055 depending on powder, bullet and caliber.Thank you for the quick response.
I’m using Reeding dies and neck tension is 0.289. Node is 2.134. 0.075 from the lands.
These were my 5 rounds today.
Inch circle and white circle in 1/4.
I don’t know that measurement but I’ll take a look at it. Thanks.You might also try different seating depths. That would be my suggestion. Do you know your distance from bullet ogive to the rifling (lands)? With the modern longer bullets they often like 30 thousandths gap or more. So you might try adjusting your coal to shorter or longer by .005 or .010. Hard to make a recommendation without the details. I most often run .025 to .055 depending on powder, bullet and caliber.
I agree with you..I’m going to cut back on powder charge. I was so focused on trying to max the speed of this sound, I didn’t realize it was going to hurt my ES/SD that much. I figured the 6.5 is so efficient, I could almost max out the powder load and my ES/SD would not change much -I WAS WRONG.Ok so that tells me that you may need a slight drop in powder charge, you are likely right on the cusp of what velocity node that gun will tollerate with that bullet/powder. Might try a 42.3 and 42.1 and see if you get a better SD and more consistent grouping with less "walking on you". Also make dang sure you are shooting off a very solid rest and have as little wobble zone as possible. You probably know this but the heart rate can make that bullet jump the amount you are seeing. Not that you are shooting wrong, but a natural respiratory pause, then send the round between heart beats. I was shooting a while back and was amazed at the amount my heartbeat would influence the movement in the reticle. Since then I changed my shot process, striving for a NPA natural point of aim, and my groups shrank by about 1/3 to 1/2 of what they were before. Come to find out, my "issues" were mostly ME,, the nut behind the scope.
There are a ton of videos on you tube and articles online about distance to lands.I don’t know that measurement but I’ll take a look at it. Thanks.
No, I started at 40.5 grains and worked my way to 42.5. 26inch at 1/8 twist.So did you work up to that 42.5grn weight? That's a pretty stiff weight for that brass. How did the lower weights work?
How long is your barrel and what twist? How far off the lands are you?
Have never used Peterson. What is the volume on those?Last winter I was using some left over Prime brass just to break in my newest 6.5CM build, but I was not happy with the SD numbers. This was with 140 ELDMs and 41.7 gr of H4350, .035” jump for 2,750 fps. SDs was in the teens. Switched to Peterson SRP brass and immediately the SDs dropped like a rock. Last time I chrono’d my SDs with the Peterson brass load was 2.7 fps from a 10-shot string.
Last winter I was using some left over Prime brass just to break in my newest 6.5CM build, but I was not happy with the SD numbers. This was with 140 ELDMs and 41.7 gr of H4350, .035” jump for 2,750 fps. SDs was in the teens. Switched to Peterson SRP brass and immediately the SDs dropped like a rock. Last time I chrono’d my SDs with the Peterson brass load was 2.7 fps from a 10-shot string.
The “not so secret” secret is quality materials and quality techniques, as you demonstrate.I have only ever used Hornady brass and my load I worked up for the 153 ATips with 40.6grns of H4350 at 2680fps has a SD of 4.6 over 30 rounds when I shot them to zero and check some data before my last match. Only took 40 rounds of testing to get that load solidified. Never had problems getting low SDs with Hornady brass either. Been using it since early 2008 when i started loading for the Creedmoor for matches.
Thanks for the info. I bought ready-to-load Nosler brass and loaded 5 rounds of it. Also loaded 5 rounds of Prime. Dropped my charge to 41 grains. Let’s see what that does for me.Last winter I was using some left over Prime brass just to break in my newest 6.5CM build, but I was not happy with the SD numbers. This was with 140 ELDMs and 41.7 gr of H4350, .035” jump for 2,750 fps. SDs was in the teens. Switched to Peterson SRP brass and immediately the SDs dropped like a rock. Last time I chrono’d my SDs with the Peterson brass load was 2.7 fps from a 10-shot string.
from what Ive seen winchester primers seem to have a softer copper head and deform much easier than the cci Ive been using that have the silver "i assume nickle alloy) head. I was trying to load up a few aguila bass just to check them after swedging the primer crimps out. The winchester primers would deform some if I did not get the swedge perfect. the cci would not. I had to decap 3-4 few live ones carefuly and then re-do the swegde to get the primers to seat correctly. Some of them I just tosssed the brass. (lesson learned)I tried some Winchester small rifle primers with 145 barnes match burners and 41.2 grains H4350 and Lapua brass. Pierced primer pockets and primer debris clogged up the firing pin channel after 4 shots. I'm hoping if I seat the bullets a little deeper I can get the remaining 46 shot without having to pull bullets. What a pain. Whats with these primers? Anyone have similar experience?
those are some good numbers, I have two boxes of 153's to do something with. I hear that RL26 works well with these bullets too.I have only ever used Hornady brass and my load I worked up for the 153 ATips with 40.6grns of H4350 at 2680fps has a SD of 4.6 over 30 rounds when I shot them to zero and check some data before my last match. Only took 40 rounds of testing to get that load solidified. Never had problems getting low SDs with Hornady brass either. Been using it since early 2008 when i started loading for the Creedmoor for matches.
those are some good numbers, I have two boxes of 153's to do something with. I hear that RL26 works well with these bullets too.
I have mine settled in at N555 and N540. I just wish I could get a steady supply of Bergers. I will use Hornady ELD and BTHP otherwise and they do a body good LOLSome times fine tuning can be as simple as changing powder . Once you've laid the evaluation ground work of course .
The world functions on Pressure & Leverage .
Look in the ejection port on your action to see if that is were the case is making contact and causing the knicks.Good morning,
Still new to reloading, and need to know if this an issue I can fix or is this normal. The cases are once fired Lapua 6.5 creedmoor 140gr hybrids 41.5 grain h4350.... 60 cases have the same "nick" in the case mouth after a day at the range.... is this fixable? Normal? any help would be great. Rifle is an AI AT 24" 1:8 barrel suppressed....
Wilco...Look in the ejection port on your action to see if that is were the case is making contact and causing the knicks.
My question is pretty simple: does this happen only with your reloads or does it also happen with factory rounds?Good morning,
Still new to reloading, and need to know if this an issue I can fix or is this normal. The cases are once fired Lapua 6.5 creedmoor 140gr hybrids 41.5 grain h4350.... 60 cases have the same "nick" in the case mouth after a day at the range.... is this fixable? Normal? any help would be great. Rifle is an AI AT 24" 1:8 barrel suppressed....
First off I wouldn't be that disappointed with .6moa at 150 m? Improvement from there could be a lot of things besides the load.And at what speed do you send it them?
Try a few different primers. Vit N555 should give you more speed without sacrificing accuracy or SD's.Thanks for your answer.
It's a coincidence that I asked similar questions, I'm not the same person.
Coming to us.... unfortunately in Italy we do not have the availability in choosing the powders that you have in the USA.
Staying in the monobasics, I use Vhitavuori N160 or N165 with which I manage to push the 147 ELDM ball at 815m/s (2674FPS). Maybe I could go even further if I wanted, but I want a precise rather than powerful charge. At this speed I have very good SD and ES (+/-3ms). Even at 790m/s I got very good spreds and similar dispersions, but it's really too slow.
I'm satisfied if I make 1/3 MOA groups at 150m and I believe the rifle can do it, but I don't want to waste time (and erode the barrel) finding the right distance from the lands. I wanted advice on a measurement from which to start the reloading study since 0.060" didn't satisfy me
Thanks for your answer.
It's a coincidence that I asked similar questions, I'm not the same person.
Coming to us.... unfortunately in Italy we do not have the availability in choosing the powders that you have in the USA.
Staying in the monobasics, I use Vhitavuori N160 or N165 with which I manage to push the 147 ELDM ball at 815m/s (2674FPS). Maybe I could go even further if I wanted, but I want a precise rather than powerful charge. At this speed I have very good SD and ES (+/-3ms). Even at 790m/s I got very good spreds and similar dispersions, but it's really too slow.
I'm satisfied if I make 1/3 MOA groups at 150m and I believe the rifle can do it, but I don't want to waste time (and erode the barrel) finding the right distance from the lands. I wanted advice on a measurement from which to start the reloading study since 0.060" didn't satisfy me
OK, I was planning on doing it at 0.015" but I could do it at 0.030", no problem.Mark : Cut that distance to 0.030" off the lands ,then fire 3 groups of #5 rounds each and evaluate your grouping . IF it improves then minor powder adjustments are in order . If not then perhaps a different powder and or bullet may be required . Either way YOU will know .
In my VV app the coal is pretty short, and on my rifle an incredibly huge jump. I did as you and ran my coal significantly longer (jump around .030 as I recall) and increased charge. I also coat my bullets in hBn which actually helps with the increase in charge. Bottom line is you can get a good bump in mv without exceeding max pressure. Just be careful and work your way up slowly watching for ANY pressure signs, then back off.OK, I was planning on doing it at 0.015" but I could do it at 0.030", no problem.
Note: By stretching -0.015" from the lands, I have more space in the case and could load more N165. I'm still 1,5grn away from the maximum Vhita tables....
OK, I was planning on doing it at 0.015" but I could do it at 0.030", no problem.
Note: By stretching -0.015" from the lands, I have more space in the case and could load more N165. I'm still 1,5grn away from the maximum Vhita tables....
I’m trying to work up a load for my 6.5 creed with the 153gn Hornaday A-Tip and H4350 powder. What kind of jumps were you testing? Any info would be appreciated. ThanksI have only ever used Hornady brass and my load I worked up for the 153 ATips with 40.6grns of H4350 at 2680fps has a SD of 4.6 over 30 rounds when I shot them to zero and check some data before my last match. Only took 40 rounds of testing to get that load solidified. Never had problems getting low SDs with Hornady brass either. Been using it since early 2008 when i started loading for the Creedmoor for matches.
I’m trying to work up a load for my 6.5 creed with the 153gn Hornaday A-Tip and H4350 powder. What kind of jumps were you testing? Any info would be appreciated. Thanks
Having used GRT and the VV app for charge weights, you should notice that the VV COL numbers are pretty small. I am wondering if your GRT COL is matching the VV number or is it matching Hornady length?First time reloading. Please share some advice on data. I have VV N150 and ELDX 143gr with Hornady brass. I understand that N150 is not perfect but that is what I have. VV reloading data show max load for this setup to be 34.4gr (2500FPS out of 25,5" barrel). I have a Bergara with a 20" barrel.
I downloaded GRT and it says that the same load with the VV data barrel length should work at 38K PSI and give 2380FPS. Also the fill rate (GRT Load radio, correct?) is at 79.9%. Am I missing something or is VV data underrated for this particular load or can I not trust GRT calculator?
I have seen people post their N150 Creedmoor loads with 37gr and even up to 40gr which is a LOT more than VV max.
For comparison GRT gives 37gr of N150 47k PSI 2540FPS and 86% load ratio.
40gr of N150 58k PSI 2700FPS and 93% load ratio.
So GRT seems to support the claims. Thus the question - what am I missing with VV public reload data?
As a secondary subject - I also have VV N560 in small quantity. I can almost fill 95%% of case capacity with max load (43.7gr N560 per VV load data) however burn ratio is somewhen at 85%. Is it bad? Should I am for 95%+ burn ratio? What would be the perfect VV powder in this situation (p.s. I am using ELDX at the moment but I am waiting on Berger 144gr, building for accuracy not hunting). That is 20" barrel and 140gr+ bullets for accuracy and range using Hornady brass.
Great info. Thanks for the fast reply. I am trying to source N555, but will take time where I live.Having used GRT and the VV app for charge weights, you should notice that the VV COL numbers are pretty small. I am wondering if your GRT COL is matching the VV number or is it matching Hornady length?
I can tell you that you can either use the VV data and it will produce numbers similar to their muzzle velocities as long as you stick to their dimensions and weight charges.
Or you can use GRT and find a charge that gets you up around 2700-2800 fps. Just make sure you load out your charges to work your way up towards the 2800. Your rifle may be different from others even if the exact same model. So play it safe and work your way up. Keep an eye out for excessive pressures.
If you load out longer (COL) you have more room to safely increase your charge, but for someone new it isn’t an obvious choice or choices. Some of us let the magazine determine max overall length of your ammo.
Make absolutely sure about the settings in GRT. Garbage in, garbage out.
PS: N150 is a good choice, but when you can switch to N540 or N555.
That’s a safe approach.Great info. Thanks for the fast reply. I am trying to source N555, but will take time where I live.
I am using COL 2.860 (AICS mag length limitation). That is about 30 thousand off from lands (measured with 300 rounds down the bore).
GRT calculations I used standard length (2.825").
VV load data for the ELDX shows 2.709". Great find and I will take this into consideration. Just to make sure I get this correct. 6.5CM should be all good to about 2700-2800FPS with a 24" barrel, correct? So as long as I work up and take into account that I have a 20" barrel I should not be going over the pressure limits as long as I chrono my results and do not go e.g. over 2700FPS with a 20" barrel, correct? Even if the public load data is somewhat lower?
ThanksNot sure as I am not home but will check later. I know I loaded them so they would reliably feed from my aics mags so about 2.860” which I think was about .060” off. I will check later.
Sorry had some issues and forgot to update but .050" off at 2.860".Thanks
Just fineAlso just looking at your primers it doesn’t seem like your to much pressure but that’s just looking at your pictures. How’s your bolt lift?
If your bolt lift is good and your primers look the way it seems they do then I think you’re doing good on pressure. Have you measured velocity with those 142s?Just fine