What seems to be the most temp stable powder for heavy bullets in the .300 WinMag? I ask because developing a load down here in Mississippi then taking it to the mountains for Elk in November is hard to correlate.
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I shoot Retumbo in the 300WM and have seen little shift in POI or velocity across a temp range from low 30's to near 100. But that is with very heavy bullets (230 gr).
Exactly my question. Years ago I did go out from +70 here to -20 there.. Misfires and delayed fires (standard primer) and low impacts (used OLD 4831)...down 10 to 12 inches at 300 yds. Learned my lesson I did. That is why I am asking about modern powders. I know about Magnum primers now, and altitude changes (generally +), but cold soaking can hurt impacts. And velocities. I might try the icebox trick. Dry ice and brass...oooohh, does brittle set in at -25 or lower? Who here has the experience? Thanks for inputs!!!
As stated, temperature stability is primarily a concern for warmer temperatures and minimizing pressure rise. IMO, for COLD temps, the powder is less important and the primer is more important. My advise is to develop a load with the hottest primer available.
Cold temps take energy, so you need a hotter primer to light the powder consistently, while still loosing some energy to heating the ambient environment inside the case.
If you REALLY want to over think it, develop a load where you're at (80F) with a normal magnum primer and then which to a hotter primer for the cold temp load, to compensate for the energy loss........ only thing you won't know what the impact is unless you can range test it first.
VihtaVouri powders were originally developed for the Finnish military, who used rifles in VERY cold weather.
Sir, when you say "little" what does that mean in terms of FPS and MOA?
You are seeing a 0.1 mil change, 70 degree change from low to high, that is some strong data, Retumbo it is!I shoot Retumbo in the 300WM and have seen little shift in POI or velocity across a temp range from low 30's to near 100. But that is with very heavy bullets (230 gr).