About to do some new load developement because Berger Target Hybrids are damn near impossible to find, so I'm working up something for the Hornady ED-M.
My question is this.
If I'm switching from Berger Target Hybrid 140gn to the Hornady ELD-M 140gn bullet, should I do a full blown load development? Or can I take the recipe from the Berger's and just simply tweak it.
I've always understood that finding an accuracy node is dependent on how much time the bullet spends travelling down the length of the barrel, which of course is adjusted by bullet speed through charge weight, seating depth, neck tension, etc. etc.
My theory here is that the bullets are the same weight, so the same powder charge should theoretically push the bullet out of the tube at approximately the same velocity. The big variable in my mind is going to be seating depth due to differences in diminsions of the bullet. If my starting point is .020" off the lands, one bullet may seat deeper than the other, resulting in more case pressure and more speed.
Does anyone have any real life experience with this?
My question is this.
If I'm switching from Berger Target Hybrid 140gn to the Hornady ELD-M 140gn bullet, should I do a full blown load development? Or can I take the recipe from the Berger's and just simply tweak it.
I've always understood that finding an accuracy node is dependent on how much time the bullet spends travelling down the length of the barrel, which of course is adjusted by bullet speed through charge weight, seating depth, neck tension, etc. etc.
My theory here is that the bullets are the same weight, so the same powder charge should theoretically push the bullet out of the tube at approximately the same velocity. The big variable in my mind is going to be seating depth due to differences in diminsions of the bullet. If my starting point is .020" off the lands, one bullet may seat deeper than the other, resulting in more case pressure and more speed.
Does anyone have any real life experience with this?