Re: Quickload accuracy prediction
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Fred_C_Dobbs</div><div class="ubbcode-body">QL's usefulness in OBT is not in the accuracy of its MV predictions but in its linking of MV to barrel time.
Based on your cartridge's particulars, QL will predict a certain muzzle velocity along with a particular barrel time (barrel time = dwell). As MV goes up, barrel time goes down and vice-versa. The OBT theory says that for a given length barrel, certain barrel times will coincide with an accuracy node. So you fiddle with the charge weight until QL's prediction for barrel time matches an OBT and that's your OBT charge weight.
I started out using the OBT-predicted charge as the middle load for OCW testing but have found that tends to be redundant because the OBT-predicted load almost always also is the OCW load. It can be astonishingly accurate.
You will have to tweak QL a bit to make it work well. Measure and weigh your bullets and measure your case's capacity and correct those numbers in QL's factory data. Then load up a handful of rounds for MV testing. From the results, you can correct your powder's burn factor to make QL's prediction match your range data. Once you've done that, you know QL's predicted barrel time also is correct. Then you can adjust the charge weight in QL to make the predicted barrel time match one of the OBT accuracy nodes. QL even has a function that will tell you every powder in its database that's capable of producing your requested barrel time based on pressure limits you also set.
The last new load I worked up with OBT, the OBT predicted load also was best in the OCW test so if I'd skipped OCW I could have had a load ready for seating depth tweaking after firing just three rounds. The longer I use OBT on a particular rifle, the better my feel for the process gets and the more compact the process becomes. That load, BTW, shoots 3-shot groups of 2"-3" @400 yards, averaging about 2.4".
I always load up foulers with a lighter charge anyway so this one time I decided to do an experiment to further test the whole OBT theory. I figured that if OBT is to be believed, I should be able to use the same data I'd just used for my "production" load and just jump to another accuracy node and have it be equally as accurate. So I reduced the charge weight until QL predicted a barrel time that was two full accuracy nodes slower than my production load. My new foulers shot 1/2" @100 yards and QL missed the MV by just 9 fps. </div></div>
Thanks! That's exactly the kind of info I was looking for.
Couple of quick Qs:
1. I realize Garbage in = garbage out. How hard is it to tweak QL as you suggest to get that data correct? Was that a laborious process?
2. Is the OBT affected by just barrel length? Or does profile, composition, rifling type, etc all affect that as well? Is that lind of stuff go into the calcs?