Re: Hand Loading for Long Range 3: finding start OAL
Just picked up a mic for this stuff. Next chapter. Thank you again.
Just picked up a mic for this stuff. Next chapter. Thank you again.
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The quickest way to find this sweet spot is to load ammo at four different COAL. Start with a COAL that allows the bullet to touch the rifling. The next COAL needs to be .040 off the lands. The third COAL needs to be .080 off the lands. The last COAL needs to be .120 off the lands. One of these COAL will outperform the other three by a considerable margin. It has been reported that the VLD bullets don’t group as well at 100 yards but get better as the bullet “goes to sleep” at further ranges. We have learned that by doing the four COAL test you will find a COAL where the VLD bullets will group well at 100 yards. Once the COAL that shoots best is established you can tweak +/- .005 or .010 to increase precision or you can adjust powder charges and other load variables. Frankly, those who do the four COAL test usually are happy with the results they get from this test alone. "" {Quote came from here}
I would also like to know the answer to Crazy Joe's post. I viewed the distance from the bolt face to the ogive as a fixed distance which should not change using different bullets of the same caliber. That should be correct unless you are not actually measuring to the ogive. For example a .308 barrel measures .300 diameter land to land and .308 groove to groove. My bullet measuring gauge has an inside diameter of .300. Therefore I'm not measuring to the ogive. I'm actually measuring a fixed distance away from the ogive and get a repeatable measurement with the same bullet type. Change the bullet type and the .300 diameter will most likely be at a different location. The result is different recorded measurements to the ogive if different bullet types are used.I think you would get the same length,bolt face to ogive,using different style or weights of bullets if the bullet gauge inside diameter is the same,in thousandths, as your barrel's groove to groove diameter.
TT, if your happy I'm happy. However it's quite easy for the bullet to stick in the riflings on any "set back" method. I don't count on it being actual, even if you get "consistent" reading. How do you know your not getting consistent bullet set back & pull out?
If your getting great results down range, Go for it!
Tres
Where did all the pics go???????????