Hey Folks!
Long story short, I've been reloading for a few years, mainly handgun and low volume rifle. As the thread title implies, I'm looking to find a process that's just "good enough" for precision rifle. I'm going to be jumping into precision rifle competition a bit more, and am going to be loading a higher volume of rifle than I ever have. I plan to load around 1,000 at a time, in batches. Run through that ammo, and load again, etc. For me, reloading is a bit of a hobby, but I really do it because it allows me to shoot more, make any ammo I want, and make better ammo, sometimes.
I'm trying to cut out all the BS and avoid rabbit holes. I'm trying to find a reloading process that doesn't focus on the tiny details, but worries about the 95% of steps that really matter. Looking for practical accuracy and low ES/SD. I really appreciate any help in advance on this topic. I know a lot of people like to get into the weeds with reloading, and I'm actively trying to do the opposite.
Folks who currently load a decent volume of rifle rounds, would you mind sharing your process start to finish, for both load development and the actual loading process? I'm putting mine below, please let me know if any of my steps are not needed, and if there's anything I need to be cutting out, or including. My goal is MOA or better ammo, so I can spend time shooting, and not on the bench. I will admit I don't know a whole lot about the reloading process and what can be done/should be done for this sort of reloading.
Load Dev:
10 rounds over magnetospeed, .2 jump until a bit over book max. Find flat spot in velocity
Load 15 rounds at that flat spot. Shoot 5 over chrono, 2x5 for groups. If it groups, we're good.
Reloading process, 1x fired brass:
Clean dirty brass in walnut media
Resize full length/deprime
Trim/Chamfer/Deburr with rcbs 3 way trimmer tool
Prime
Drop powder charges
Seat bullets
Done.
Long story short, I've been reloading for a few years, mainly handgun and low volume rifle. As the thread title implies, I'm looking to find a process that's just "good enough" for precision rifle. I'm going to be jumping into precision rifle competition a bit more, and am going to be loading a higher volume of rifle than I ever have. I plan to load around 1,000 at a time, in batches. Run through that ammo, and load again, etc. For me, reloading is a bit of a hobby, but I really do it because it allows me to shoot more, make any ammo I want, and make better ammo, sometimes.
I'm trying to cut out all the BS and avoid rabbit holes. I'm trying to find a reloading process that doesn't focus on the tiny details, but worries about the 95% of steps that really matter. Looking for practical accuracy and low ES/SD. I really appreciate any help in advance on this topic. I know a lot of people like to get into the weeds with reloading, and I'm actively trying to do the opposite.
Folks who currently load a decent volume of rifle rounds, would you mind sharing your process start to finish, for both load development and the actual loading process? I'm putting mine below, please let me know if any of my steps are not needed, and if there's anything I need to be cutting out, or including. My goal is MOA or better ammo, so I can spend time shooting, and not on the bench. I will admit I don't know a whole lot about the reloading process and what can be done/should be done for this sort of reloading.
Load Dev:
10 rounds over magnetospeed, .2 jump until a bit over book max. Find flat spot in velocity
Load 15 rounds at that flat spot. Shoot 5 over chrono, 2x5 for groups. If it groups, we're good.
Reloading process, 1x fired brass:
Clean dirty brass in walnut media
Resize full length/deprime
Trim/Chamfer/Deburr with rcbs 3 way trimmer tool
Prime
Drop powder charges
Seat bullets
Done.