Re: Tightening up ES and SD numbers?
OP,
When I start load development on a new rifle I pick my starting point based on other rifles, loading manuals and past experience. While I'm a Lapua slut by nature it's not the be all end all of rifle brass I once thought it was. I've found that in two of my three 260's it's actually slower in velocity and less accurate than the RP or WW offerings. Uniform neck tension or lack there of and run out of a loaded round is probably the biggest culprits to accuracy degradation.
Primers do make a difference despite what other may say. I've switched to the CCI BR2 in my 260's and shot well over 5k CCI450's in three 6BR's and one Dasher. The CCIBR2 simply rocks in all the rifles I've tried them in except for one.
Powder, my favorites are H4350, H4895, Varget and RL-25. I use these in all my rifles and all have served me well.
Bullets, 139 Lapua Scenar, 105 Berger VLD, 105 Berger Hybrid, 180 Berger VLD, 175 SMK & 107 SMK is what I've shot the most of. The VLD's are fairly finicky as to seating depth but do shoot once the sweat spot has been found. The Scenars & SMK's tune easy and are much less finicky.
Not knowing what caliber you're working with makes it hard to make recommendations but, there are several things that I've found that cross from rifle to rifle.
I could right volumes on case prep and rifle tuning coming from a strong BR back ground but I wont. I'll just hit the high spots and what I do for my field rifles.
First, uniform neck tension and proper FL sizing. Get that right and consistent first and foremost. .002" neck tension is what I've found to work best with .003" being my absolute max. Just for conversation, I neck turn. Chamfer the case mouths with a VLD tool, Sinclair has a good one. Use the Redding type "S" FL dies with a bushing .002" to .003" smaller in diameter than your loaded necks. Redding Imperial sizing die wax has no equal. Bump the shoulder no more than .0015“ to .002” max. Use the black expander ball to hold the decapping pin in place, it wont drag the ID of your case necks. The silver expander ball will drag the ID of your case necks and this will induce run out.
Rifle brass, new rifle gets new brass. All the same head stamp. Try them all to find what works best in your rifle if you can as this is one area that can make or brake you. Don’t dismiss RP or WW brass as it seems to be fairly good these days.
Prime your cases by feel. What I mean is when you feel the primer bottom out, stop applying pressure.
Powder charge, weigh them all. Throwing is fine but, weigh them prior to dumping. I use a Harrell’s Premium Culver type and weigh my charges after throwing. Every time I don’t weigh my charges it bights me in the ass. Weigh your charges. For a starting charge weight I start at "X" and go up .5 at a time until the rifle shoots or shows pressure. If the rifle shows pressure before it shoots I change the primer or powder, usually the powder first and start over. Some rifles like the BR or Dasher will shoot differently with as little as .2 of powder charge weight difference while others like the 260 can show a difference with as little as .3 grains.
Bullet seating depth, VLD's touching to +.015" in is what usually works best but, they are finicky and will get out of tune. You have to stay on top of them to keep the rifle in tune and shooting to it's max potential.
Scenars/SMK's, jumping .005" is where I'm at but .010" has worked OK in some rifles. The Hybrids seem to work jumping as much as .050" in some rifles.
VLD bullets in BR rifles = Good
VLD bullets in field rifles = bit ass
Test in ideal conditions, early morning or late evening. Three shot groups at first to weed out what doesn’t work. If shots 1 & 2 are 2” apart, shot # 3 isn’t going to tighten the group up. Initial testing at 100 yards, proofing at 300 yards. Your looking for round or triangular shaped groups, not stringing or two in a hole and one out type stuff. Make your shots count and watch everything like wind, shooter habits, rear bag, thumb pressure, cheek weld and eye relief just to mention a few.
It’s all about consistency behind the rifle and at the loading bench. Quality built rifles are very capable of groups in the .1’s with relative ease. .2’s are almost the norm and what you should expect if all of the above is adhered to.