Turbo54's thread on this from 3 years ago didn't ever get a conclusive answer.
Yesterday I was working load dev at 400 and to warm up I tried some of the Remington Premier Match 168s. POI was about 1.5 MOA right of POA. I was thinking maybe my scope was off somehow but I left it. Switched to my loads, the 178 AMAX were right where I expected them to be. I don't buy that harmonics are whipping my barrel laterally like that, if the action is torqued in the z most whip would be in the z (vertical).
I'm wondering if this is somehow related to spin drift? Could some property of the 168 give it more traction, where the 178s are slipping more? Let's say the bullet is making about 14k revolutions during the flight. Circumference is nearly one inch. Doesn't that mean that a miniscule change in surface friction could make a big difference in lateral poi shift? Softer jacket with more rifling ridges for example. Isn't it a little like a belt sander with an abrasive speed of about 15000 fps? Some abrasives catch more than others.
Velocity was close on both rounds, without looking at the chrono I think they were both mid-2600s.
700 SPS varmint in 308
Manners t4 with dbm torqued to spec
bipod
Any thoughts?
Yesterday I was working load dev at 400 and to warm up I tried some of the Remington Premier Match 168s. POI was about 1.5 MOA right of POA. I was thinking maybe my scope was off somehow but I left it. Switched to my loads, the 178 AMAX were right where I expected them to be. I don't buy that harmonics are whipping my barrel laterally like that, if the action is torqued in the z most whip would be in the z (vertical).
I'm wondering if this is somehow related to spin drift? Could some property of the 168 give it more traction, where the 178s are slipping more? Let's say the bullet is making about 14k revolutions during the flight. Circumference is nearly one inch. Doesn't that mean that a miniscule change in surface friction could make a big difference in lateral poi shift? Softer jacket with more rifling ridges for example. Isn't it a little like a belt sander with an abrasive speed of about 15000 fps? Some abrasives catch more than others.
Velocity was close on both rounds, without looking at the chrono I think they were both mid-2600s.
700 SPS varmint in 308
Manners t4 with dbm torqued to spec
bipod
Any thoughts?