I have had my go to load for my 16" AR15 for quite a while now. That load is 24.3 grains of Varget and a 69 grain SMK.
When I first built the rifle back in 2015 I chased groups for a while but I haven't done it since. My best effort gave me a 10 shot group that could be covered up (all the outside edges) by a dime. A dime is .7 inches so I figure I was right around a .5 to .6 MOA group at the time for a single string of 10 shots. It was repeatable (which I did more than once) but I called it good eventually and moved on.
Fast forward a few years and I build a few other rifles and shoot a few other things a lot more and I bought some new toys including a brand new chronograph (labradar), new dies, new press etc. Eventually I roll back around to that rifle and that load.
I got lazy quite a while back and quit being 'super accurate' on my charge weights... I would just drop them with a powder charge and call it good. It served my purposes just fine to do that because I wasn't chasing bug hole groups or anything like that.
What I did today though was found a few small boxes of ammo that I loaded previously using the lazy man's method and I shot (and recorded) some strings just to see what I was getting velocity wise. Previously I didn't have a good chrono at all. This ammo was sitting for at least two years untouched (same with the gun). Not sure if that makes any difference. I used some basic Lake City brass but it was all the same head stamp.
With the old ammo I recorded 39 consecutive shots in a single string and got an ES of 122 and a SD of 26. This was the ammo made with no annealing and a simple powder drop without individually weighing anything.
After that I used the same brass (the exact same pieces) and did my first ever anneal. This was my experiment. I full length resized with a new die (from the old ammo), but I weighed each charge. Everything else was standard fare.
With the weighed charges (and anneal) my SD went to 14 and my ES 37. It's a big improvement over the previous ammo (using the exact same pieces of LC brass) where I got an ES of 122 and an SD of 26. It's also worth noting that the first attempt had a few shots that might have been misread. I didn't delete anything so the true numbers might be a bit off.
I still have some of the old ammo left so I might re-run this test.
Let me know what you think of my extremely informal testing and maybe something else or some other ideas that I can add in to the mix.
When I first built the rifle back in 2015 I chased groups for a while but I haven't done it since. My best effort gave me a 10 shot group that could be covered up (all the outside edges) by a dime. A dime is .7 inches so I figure I was right around a .5 to .6 MOA group at the time for a single string of 10 shots. It was repeatable (which I did more than once) but I called it good eventually and moved on.
Fast forward a few years and I build a few other rifles and shoot a few other things a lot more and I bought some new toys including a brand new chronograph (labradar), new dies, new press etc. Eventually I roll back around to that rifle and that load.
I got lazy quite a while back and quit being 'super accurate' on my charge weights... I would just drop them with a powder charge and call it good. It served my purposes just fine to do that because I wasn't chasing bug hole groups or anything like that.
What I did today though was found a few small boxes of ammo that I loaded previously using the lazy man's method and I shot (and recorded) some strings just to see what I was getting velocity wise. Previously I didn't have a good chrono at all. This ammo was sitting for at least two years untouched (same with the gun). Not sure if that makes any difference. I used some basic Lake City brass but it was all the same head stamp.
With the old ammo I recorded 39 consecutive shots in a single string and got an ES of 122 and a SD of 26. This was the ammo made with no annealing and a simple powder drop without individually weighing anything.
After that I used the same brass (the exact same pieces) and did my first ever anneal. This was my experiment. I full length resized with a new die (from the old ammo), but I weighed each charge. Everything else was standard fare.
With the weighed charges (and anneal) my SD went to 14 and my ES 37. It's a big improvement over the previous ammo (using the exact same pieces of LC brass) where I got an ES of 122 and an SD of 26. It's also worth noting that the first attempt had a few shots that might have been misread. I didn't delete anything so the true numbers might be a bit off.
I still have some of the old ammo left so I might re-run this test.
Let me know what you think of my extremely informal testing and maybe something else or some other ideas that I can add in to the mix.