Is load development for big bore cartridges a thing? I mean, take 458 Lott, 470 Nitro Express or 505 Gibbs.
Obviously, these are not bench-rest cartridges or even PRS or F-Class, and there are some load-development steps that simply aren't going to matter for the kind of precision sought from the rifles that shoot these. I don't think anyone is chasing 1/4 MOA groups with these things.
But what steps are appropriate?
Would I want to shoot a ladder and try to find a node? I'm not going to shoot even 300 yards to see a vertical spread, but I could use a chronograph.
Suppose I find an apparent node and load 5 somewhere in the middle. Then I could check group-size at 100 yards, ES and SD. ES could matter, but how much does SD matter?
Should I even look at seating depth, jump, freebore, chase the lands?
While these cartridges are typically associated with dangerous game at relatively close distances less than 100 yards, they have the velocity to shoot MPBR out to 200 or 250 yards. It seems like some kind of load development procedure would be appropriate, but which steps are actually going to contribute to making these things more accurate than just a slug gun?
Obviously, these are not bench-rest cartridges or even PRS or F-Class, and there are some load-development steps that simply aren't going to matter for the kind of precision sought from the rifles that shoot these. I don't think anyone is chasing 1/4 MOA groups with these things.
But what steps are appropriate?
Would I want to shoot a ladder and try to find a node? I'm not going to shoot even 300 yards to see a vertical spread, but I could use a chronograph.
Suppose I find an apparent node and load 5 somewhere in the middle. Then I could check group-size at 100 yards, ES and SD. ES could matter, but how much does SD matter?
Should I even look at seating depth, jump, freebore, chase the lands?
While these cartridges are typically associated with dangerous game at relatively close distances less than 100 yards, they have the velocity to shoot MPBR out to 200 or 250 yards. It seems like some kind of load development procedure would be appropriate, but which steps are actually going to contribute to making these things more accurate than just a slug gun?