Well I was doing some Google searches and looking around a bit at some recommendations for reloads for my M1A. This is what I learned from the interwebs...
1) LC brass is best, it is the thickest and can handle the rigorous beating from the M1A bolt. (is this completely necessary or will my winchester and Fed brass be fine?)
2) Don't use Federal 210 or 210M primers, they are too soft and can result in slam fires. (great, I just bought a couple thousand). Win and CCI are preferred.
3) Buy a small base die to ensure easy and uniform sliding of the round into the chamber to avoid premature detonation of the round.
4) Crimp it? Don't crimp it? This was unclear but I think I am going to crimp them. It slammed one of my reloads into the feed ramp and seated it about .02" further into the brass..yikes.
5) Don't shoot anything over 175 gr, it can hurt your piston/op rod. 155 is a more tamable recoil, but 168 is the go to.
6) Don't use mid or slower burning powders like Varget, use faster stuff like 4895...(weird, Hornady says RL15 and Varget gave good performance)
7) The most common round is LC brass, Win or CCI primer, 41.5-42.5 gr IMR 4895 powder, and finally a 168 gr pill up top.
I guess what I am looking for is some confirmation on this or some recommendations. Am I going to get slam fires with my Fed primers and should I just sell these to my brother for his bolt gun and invest in some more Win or CCI primers?
I just want to make sure I am doing things right and won't hurt my gun or myself with an improper load. I used the following load left over from my bolt gun:
Federal Brass trimmed .01" below SAAMI max brass length (per Hornady guide)
43.5 gr Varget (apparently this is too much now that I look at their service rifle load specs that show 42 gr tops, I think)
Win LR primer
Loaded them to max length while still able to fit in the magazine
I only had one load that appeared to give me pressure issues but it only blew out part of the primer (perhaps the pocket was too loose or the primer was seated crooked?). The accuracy was decent for an M1A (around 1-1.5MOA @ 100). My concern is that these loads are below Hornady factory specs and I have about 500 rounds of factory match ammo I was planning on shooting. Is this stuff safe to shoot?
Thanks ahead of time guys.
1) LC brass is best, it is the thickest and can handle the rigorous beating from the M1A bolt. (is this completely necessary or will my winchester and Fed brass be fine?)
2) Don't use Federal 210 or 210M primers, they are too soft and can result in slam fires. (great, I just bought a couple thousand). Win and CCI are preferred.
3) Buy a small base die to ensure easy and uniform sliding of the round into the chamber to avoid premature detonation of the round.
4) Crimp it? Don't crimp it? This was unclear but I think I am going to crimp them. It slammed one of my reloads into the feed ramp and seated it about .02" further into the brass..yikes.
5) Don't shoot anything over 175 gr, it can hurt your piston/op rod. 155 is a more tamable recoil, but 168 is the go to.
6) Don't use mid or slower burning powders like Varget, use faster stuff like 4895...(weird, Hornady says RL15 and Varget gave good performance)
7) The most common round is LC brass, Win or CCI primer, 41.5-42.5 gr IMR 4895 powder, and finally a 168 gr pill up top.
I guess what I am looking for is some confirmation on this or some recommendations. Am I going to get slam fires with my Fed primers and should I just sell these to my brother for his bolt gun and invest in some more Win or CCI primers?
I just want to make sure I am doing things right and won't hurt my gun or myself with an improper load. I used the following load left over from my bolt gun:
Federal Brass trimmed .01" below SAAMI max brass length (per Hornady guide)
43.5 gr Varget (apparently this is too much now that I look at their service rifle load specs that show 42 gr tops, I think)
Win LR primer
Loaded them to max length while still able to fit in the magazine
I only had one load that appeared to give me pressure issues but it only blew out part of the primer (perhaps the pocket was too loose or the primer was seated crooked?). The accuracy was decent for an M1A (around 1-1.5MOA @ 100). My concern is that these loads are below Hornady factory specs and I have about 500 rounds of factory match ammo I was planning on shooting. Is this stuff safe to shoot?
Thanks ahead of time guys.