The propellant is called "Long Range Match" when ordering surplus. It's military version of Reloader 15. I only had one to work with or I would have taken some averages. Hope this helps somebody.
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Hey man, did you make that ogive gauge yourself?
I have infrequent access to a machine shop and would love to make one if its as simple as a drill press and a reamer.
It looks an awful lot like a comparator from Sinclair International-
www.sinclairintl.com/reloading-equi...r-hex-style-bullet-comparators-prod34262.aspx
Look through the "Reloading depot" forum. There should be several RE-15 175 loads. A 178 Amax would net the same results.This is a very informative thread, has anyone loaded the SMK 175gr with 42.8gr RE-15 with a COAL of 2.819? I'd be interested in hearing how it worked & what MV you got out of it in your rifle. Thanks in advance.
Look through the "Reloading depot" forum. There should be several RE-15 175 loads. A 178 Amax would net the same results.
Was this straight from lake city?
On that hex bullet comparator does the 30 cal hole just give you the length of bullet where the shoulder actually meets the rifling? I'm assuming that helps gauge a perfect oal for seating? Sorry if that's a dumb question, i just started reloading... Definitely didn't snag a comparator yet, and i'm wondering if I need one.
The 308 load I use has a OAL of 2.825" and has plenty of room in an A&I magazine, surely GAP uses the top notch A&I mags, or not?I am surprised the C.O.L. is so long at 2.819. I doubt this would fit in my GAP rifle at all. My 2.800 lengths barely fit!
The 308 load I use has a OAL of 2.825" and has plenty of room in an A&I magazine, surely GAP uses the top notch A&I mags, or not?
The title of "Long Range Match" powder is something that was applied by the dealer selling the surplus powder. If this was produced in 2007 (as the brass is headstamped) then it's nothing more than plain old Reloder 15 powder, albeit from a bulk lot shipped directly to Lake City. Reloder 15 became the powder of choice for M118LR when ATK (who owns alliant) won the contract to run Lake City some years back. Prior to that, when Olin had the contract to operate the plant, the powder used was a non-cannister powder known as WC-750. Not coincidentally, Olin produced this powder, and it was the standard powder for M118LR, as well as the previous runs of M118 Special Ball. Before this, Remington had the contract for many years, and during their tenure IMR4895 (DuPont powder, also under the Olin umbrella) was the powder of choice . . . do we see a pattern here? The government doesn't specify powder, it specifies performance characteristics. Velocity, pressure, SD, accuracy, temp stability, etc., and so long as the resulting ammo meets those specs, the gov is happy. As a result, the powder in the ammo depends solely on who had the contract during the period the ammo was produced.
The only two features that the handloader can't duplicate for this ammo are the primer (it's an M43, which is not commercially available; not to be confused with the M34 which CCI produces), and the asphaltum sealant inside the case neck (you can see it on the bullet in the photo). Aside from this, it's not hard to effectively duplicate the performance of this ammo.
And as someone has already mentioned, there is no specification for powder charge weight. This gets worked up with every new batch of powder, to assure that it delivers the same performance required by the specs. The powder charge is tested down to the hundredth of a grain to establish the midline base for that lot, and the charge weight variation for production standards is set on either side of that line. Whatever that comes out to, that's what the charge weight will be for that particular batch of powder. If I recall correctly, I believe the velocity requirement was 2580 fps @ 78 ft, which equates back to something like 2620 fps at the muzzle. Over the years, I certified literally scores of millions of these bullets, firing tens of thousands of groups for thousands of certifications. Done up right, this combination still shoots pretty damned well.
The title of "Long Range Match" powder is something that was applied by the dealer selling the surplus powder. If this was produced in 2007 (as the brass is headstamped) then it's nothing more than plain old Reloder 15 powder, albeit from a bulk lot shipped directly to Lake City. Reloder 15 became the powder of choice for M118LR when ATK (who owns alliant) won the contract to run Lake City some years back. Prior to that, when Olin had the contract to operate the plant, the powder used was a non-cannister powder known as WC-750. Not coincidentally, Olin produced this powder, and it was the standard powder for M118LR, as well as the previous runs of M118 Special Ball. Before this, Remington had the contract for many years, and during their tenure IMR4895 (DuPont powder, also under the Olin umbrella) was the powder of choice . . . do we see a pattern here? The government doesn't specify powder, it specifies performance characteristics. Velocity, pressure, SD, accuracy, temp stability, etc., and so long as the resulting ammo meets those specs, the gov is happy. As a result, the powder in the ammo depends solely on who had the contract during the period the ammo was produced.
The only two features that the handloader can't duplicate for this ammo are the primer (it's an M43, which is not commercially available; not to be confused with the M34 which CCI produces), and the asphaltum sealant inside the case neck (you can see it on the bullet in the photo). Aside from this, it's not hard to effectively duplicate the performance of this ammo.
And as someone has already mentioned, there is no specification for powder charge weight. This gets worked up with every new batch of powder, to assure that it delivers the same performance required by the specs. The powder charge is tested down to the hundredth of a grain to establish the midline base for that lot, and the charge weight variation for production standards is set on either side of that line. Whatever that comes out to, that's what the charge weight will be for that particular batch of powder. If I recall correctly, I believe the velocity requirement was 2580 fps @ 78 ft, which equates back to something like 2620 fps at the muzzle. Over the years, I certified literally scores of millions of these bullets, firing tens of thousands of groups for thousands of certifications. Done up right, this combination still shoots pretty damned well.
Measure your chamber. If you are seating that close to the lands with FGMM it could be that you need the throat moved forward a bit.I am surprised the C.O.L. is so long at 2.819. I doubt this would fit in my GAP rifle at all. My 2.800 lengths barely fit!
Measure your chamber. If you are seating that close to the lands with FGMM it could be that you need the throat moved forward a bit.
Build enough guns and it happens. I've seen two of them so far. Incorrect measurements at setup, probably. No big deal. Easily fixed. It should shoot very well either way, but I even saw one that would stick bullets into the lands at factory OAL.That is interesting. I find it hard to believe that the folks at G.A. Precision would make a mistake like that..
That is interesting. I find it hard to believe that the folks at G.A. Precision would make a mistake like that. How do I measure the chamber then?
Meanwhile, the accuracy of the rifle has now (120 rounds) achieved 3/8 inch MOA at 100 yards, so I cannot complain about the chamber versus the accuracy.
Thank you for the info.
The title of "Long Range Match" powder is something that was applied by the dealer selling the surplus powder. If this was produced in 2007 (as the brass is headstamped) then it's nothing more than plain old Reloder 15 powder, albeit from a bulk lot shipped directly to Lake City. Reloder 15 became the powder of choice for M118LR when ATK (who owns alliant) won the contract to run Lake City some years back. Prior to that, when Olin had the contract to operate the plant, the powder used was a non-cannister powder known as WC-750. Not coincidentally, Olin produced this powder, and it was the standard powder for M118LR, as well as the previous runs of M118 Special Ball. Before this, Remington had the contract for many years, and during their tenure IMR4895 (DuPont powder, also under the Olin umbrella) was the powder of choice . . . do we see a pattern here? The government doesn't specify powder, it specifies performance characteristics. Velocity, pressure, SD, accuracy, temp stability, etc., and so long as the resulting ammo meets those specs, the gov is happy. As a result, the powder in the ammo depends solely on who had the contract during the period the ammo was produced.
The only two features that the handloader can't duplicate for this ammo are the primer (it's an M43, which is not commercially available; not to be confused with the M34 which CCI produces), and the asphaltum sealant inside the case neck (you can see it on the bullet in the photo). Aside from this, it's not hard to effectively duplicate the performance of this ammo.
And as someone has already mentioned, there is no specification for powder charge weight. This gets worked up with every new batch of powder, to assure that it delivers the same performance required by the specs. The powder charge is tested down to the hundredth of a grain to establish the midline base for that lot, and the charge weight variation for production standards is set on either side of that line. Whatever that comes out to, that's what the charge weight will be for that particular batch of powder. If I recall correctly, I believe the velocity requirement was 2580 fps @ 78 ft, which equates back to something like 2620 fps at the muzzle. Over the years, I certified literally scores of millions of these bullets, firing tens of thousands of groups for thousands of certifications. Done up right, this combination still shoots pretty damned well.