The thing with reloading, and I am sure a lot of you will agree, is the published information is FILLED with errors. You can not find a burn rate chart that is the same as all the others unless it was copied from someone else, the reloading manuals are also filled with errors - not to mention so conservative due to our litigation-addicted society, (with exception to the odd hot load mistakes you find edition to edition) powder really does vary from lot to lot, and then add in a program that was written based on a lot of miss-information, and/or was based on powder burn rates that do not correlate with current production lots.
I personally feel load development is an art based on a lot of empirical observation over a lot of years of having successes and making mistakes, and even that knowledge gained from that experience needs to be tweaked lot to lot.
I remember the day when I would buy a couple pounds of powder at a time because when I ran out I could go to the local shop and get another pound. I remember the frustration of duplicating a load from the previously purchased powder and having my groups open up a half MOA or more... Now when I buy powder, if there are no quantity limits, I will buy 24-32 pounds at a time just so I have consistency round to round for a year or more.
Let me clarify this a little further for you. Quickload load NOT a substitute for a reloading manual. How I narrow powder down is buy ONLY looking at powder that I have load data from.
I agree with that 100%. One of the problems I have with Quickload is the learning curve it has, the other big problem I have is the accuracy of it's data. I have never gotten the same crono readings from a calculated load stated velocity.
There are so many variables in reloading that the only reliable source of information is that empirical knowledge you get over time, learning the shortcuts to finding that last safe node, and knowing exactly what to do when you get a new lot of powder. Quickload is something to use in the process of figuring all this stuff out but I think you get to a point where you grow out of it. It is something you need to grow into, and it is definitely something you grow out of as a reloader.
The thing that is most concerning to me about modern reloading is reloading is becoming a harder art to learn because of all the powder choices we have now. There was a time when your powder choices were as diverse as Norma's total product offering, now we get powders from every corner of the earth and there are at least 30 powders that can be used in 30-06 alone. When it gets this confusing you see a lot of knuckleheads make mistakes..
Here is a story:
I was at my gunsmiths and he showed me a bolt that came out of a 338 Lapua and the end of it was like a mushroom and there was a piece of brass welded to the end of it (It was a 338). He just got done fixing the rifle, new action, set the barrel back... and the owner showed up shortly after him showing me this to pick up the rifle and he had a live 338 round in his hands and chambered it in the shop... THANKFULLY, the bullet was set out so far he could not close the bolt. This guy had NO CLUE about seating depth, and blamed the previous action maker for the mushroomed bolt as if it was the actions fault that this round likely hit 85,000 PSI to do what it did (This was a McMillian action and you know how tough they are, we are talking SERIOUS pressure)...
When you see shit like that and that kind of stupidity, it scares the hell out of you. This is not someone I want to sit next to on the firing line and definitely not someone I want to see using quickload let alone opening the lid to a pound of powder.
The point I am trying to make is, there is no better experience than experience. Quickload has its merits but it is a bit of a crutch.
Here is what I did when I developed my 12 absolutely AWESOME loads for my 30-06... I put over 3000 rounds down the barrel to find the absolute best and I did exactly that. I sacrificed a barrel in the process and at some point here very soon I will be getting it rebarreled. (I have a matched pair of rifles so I am using these perfected loads in the twin).
What I gained from that experience is priceless. Out of the 25+ powders I tested I know the characteristics of all of them in this caliber. This education cost me about $3000 with the new barrel. But get me on the 1000 yard line and I will embarrass a 300 WM owner... You dont get that kind of experience out of quickload. Some shortcuts simply are not worth the education you sacrifice for the sake of "saving time".
Doing it the hard way has very distinct advantages.