One important factor 90%+ do not mention in these types of threads is brass manufacturer. You put in the high node load for Hornady brass into Peterson brass and you are going to have issues.
This ^^^^^ absolutely without question.
I've been shooting 3 brands of brass:
S&B
Hornady
Lapua
S&B is slightly heavier and the load was developed for it.
With the Hornady and Lapua, it's close enough to the S&B that I didn't need to change anything.
Picked up a couple hundred pieces of Kinetic Match brass. They are nearly 20 grains heavier than the others.
Loaded a few at my 41.5 and just as I suspected, they are not just warm, they are too fuggin hot.
I shot only two of the rounds and should have stopped at 1.
What I'm saying is, the charge weight can be totally fine in one brand of brass and totally over the top in another.
I knew the kinetic brass would yield more pressure, but I really didn't think it would be sticky in the chamber. The brass likes the powder charge 2gr lower to get the same perfornance.
Another thing to consider is that pressure signs are completely different using the same lot of brass if it's new vs once/twice fired.
Remember, brass hardens with use. Each time it's fired, it's ability to transmit pressure signs diminishes.
I'm not speculating on this information. I used to work for an ammunition manufacturer and I tested this myself.
The SAAMI specifications specifically spell this out.
To go one level deeper, the pressure test barrels have separate transducers for each caliber/brand of brass.
If I was to use the FC xducer on Lapua brass, the pressure would show much higher than it actually is since Lapua brass is a bit harder just forward of the web.
Why did I bother to write this?
Go back to the part about using a known load in unknown brass. I got very high pressure signs with what is normally considered a book maximum load.
Why?
Case capacity or differences in the internal size of a pressure vessel.
Don't just take someone else's load and run with it.
You might get lucky, or you might get a case that ruptures and lose an eye over it.
Ain't worth it.