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Sorry, but those 2 manuals you listed will never have the exact same bullet listed. I am not sure how or what you are comparing.Depends what book they hardly ever agree on anything anyways. For example in several 223's I usually shoot the 55 grain bullet with benchmark 25.5 grains which is .5 over max according to Nosler but .1 under max according to Hornady. Watch for the signs and have a good feeling for your gun. I would get a lil nervous going two grains over a published max,
Right, I just addressed what he posted, and I was saying bullet companies manuals differ from powder companies data. No 2 bullets are the same. We can get general ideas if both are held in your hand, but it ends there.@Milo 2.5 I’ve seen Hodgdon’s published data and Hornady’s published data for the same bullet be off considerably before. I know you’re making the point that he is looking at 2 different manufacturer’s bullets in the same weight class, and that’s not a good comparison, but I’m just saying it isn’t impossible to find 2 different published data sets for the same bullet, and they often have fairly large gaps between them.
Another good point. It is up to each of us to determine what is safe, it'd be nice if we could learn this overnight, not the way it works though, at least in my case.Hornady data is based on Hornady brass which often has less capacity than Winchester brass used by Hodgdon. Hence the difference in powder charge.
I am not telling you to load over book max, but like it has been stated, most manuals are more than conservative. It gets worse by the year also, if you had access to older manuals, and had the time, you could find how charges over the yrs have dropped for the same bullet used.
Berger has more or less stated, all the data in their manual is Quickload based, no shooting whatsoever.
The software Quickload is worth the investment, not tough to use either.
There is nothing wrong with trying to find pressure with the components you are going to use, just go up in charge in smaller increments till you feel primer rupture, stiffer bolt lift, or casehead marks.
If I want to find max pressure, I go up .2gr in cases that have 35gr capacity, .3gr in cases that hold 50gr, in larger, I go up in .5gr increments. It surely is not needed to know what you are going to shoot will actually handle, but it can give you piece of mind knowing that you are not close if problems arise later down the road.
On my Mauser I am being more cautious because the max pressure is 51,000 cup I was told. Its almost 100 years old and there is no gas relief hole.
What brass does the Berger manual use vs what the Nosler manual uses?
What bullet was in both of those manuals? I'm rolling with not a one, 2 bullet companies.I was running right on max load in the Nosler manual and recently found out it's 1.4gr more than the Berger manual. My loads ran fine at that... until this past weekend shooting a match in the rain. One stage my rounds or chamber must've gotten wet and I experienced a pretty heavy bolt lift and some good ejector mark on the case head. So the book may be conservative, but it's also for ideal conditions.
Time to back the loads off half a grain or so and test it out again.
What bullet was in both of those manuals? I'm rolling with not a one, 2 bullet companies.
On your wet chamber, bolt guns are not made to be shot with wet ammo, and yes, it may have been hot. It has to do with room in the chamber, water is not displaced when a rd is fired. Maybe using a small base die instead may account for the room needed.
What I was trying to say is no 2 bullets are alike, just because it is a 130gr, does not make them equal. You may have a slight variance in diameter, bearing surface, etc...Nosler Manual was using the Accubond LR and Berger was using the 130gr Target bullet I believe. Neither were the exact bullet I'm using.
What I was trying to say is no 2 bullets are alike, just because it is a 130gr, does not make them equal. You may have a slight variance in diameter, bearing surface, etc...
It is best to just get a feel for the bullet you plan to shoot by working into the charge.
Like I said, bullet companies have load data, and powder companies have load data.
Now this is just my opinion, but Sierra has always had the most realistic data for their bullets compared to others.
On your wet chamber, bolt guns are not made to be shot with wet ammo, and yes, it may have been hot. It has to do with room in the chamber, water is not displaced when a rd is fired. Maybe using a small base die instead may account for the room needed.
If you live in WY, shoot the stuff after leaving it sit in your vehicle overnight shoot the gun and ammo cold the next morning, truer test.I have this dilemma when doing cold ammo testing on a warm day even in the semi arid climate here in Wyoming, at 7200 feet. I put the ammo in a ziplock submerged in ice overnight to get 32 degs. It comes out of the baggie dry but starts getting a condensation film immediately as I load it into the chamber. I do this one by one as fast as I can to mitigate. I have not noticed pressure problems but I wonder if the velocity is higher due to higher pressure.....
Understood but I am a hunter. Stuff getting wet is unavoidable. Waiting for cold weather to run test is not really ideal. Further, the ambient temp is changing so know exactly what your powder is by using ambient temp is hard. An ice soak gives me a constant 32 +or minus a couple degrees which is why I do it. I guess nothing is ideal......If you live in WY, shoot the stuff after leaving it sit in your vehicle overnight shoot the gun and ammo cold the next morning, truer test.
Nothing really good comes from wet ammo, in my world anyway, whether condensation, water, lube or oils, lol
Lol, no shit.Understood but I am a hunter. Stuff getting wet is unavoidable. Waiting for cold weather to run test is not really ideal. Further, the ambient temp is changing so know exactly what your powder is by using ambient temp is hard. An ice soak gives me a constant 32 +or minus a couple degrees which is why I do it. I guess nothing is ideal......
But here in WY,
If this is for me, I referenced a comment made on 2 books, 2 diff bullets, 2 diff charges. Answering your question, common sense says no, all bullets are diff though. Esp 22 cal bullets,, ballistic tips-vmax's, blitzkings comparison.Does it really matter (pressure wise) that much for the same type bullet from different manufacturers?
But then load data from different places can be a few grains different.
I've wasted a lot of time and material starting well below max and ending up well past max with no pressure signs.
To the pointing in the future I'm going to start 1 below published max.