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I know I want 2800-3200 out of the 308 and 30-06. Both pushing 175's.
You read a reloading manual and see what powders are listed, and then see what powders you can buy. Powder is so scarce right now, that you'll be selecting powders based on what you can actually buy.How do you decide on a powder?
I know I want 2800-3200 out of the 308 and 30-06. Both pushing 175's.
I know I want 2800-3200 out of the 308 and 30-06. Both pushing 175's.
46" barrel? C'mon man no one is going to take you serious now. Might want to pick up a reloading manual and do some research.
If you can find any, 4895 will work great in all three of your rifle loads. You're not going to see top notch velocities in the 30-06, but you should find the rifles accuracy potential.
18" 30-06. This doesn't happen to be a Remington autoloader?
After further review, I'll change that to 2400-2600. Sorry about that, I'm new to reloading (obviously) and had it written down for some reason.
I know I want 2800-3200 out of the 308 and 30-06. Both pushing 175's.
I suggest you concentrate on one at a time. I suggest you start with the 308. The 45 is a bit complicated, compared to bottlenecked cartridges and the 30/30 is like honey badger, it just don't care. You will really need to do your homework on the short barreled '06. This requires a considerably faster powder than you will see in the manuals.
So, with all the data available for 308, it would be hard to come up with a load that is a bad idea, even considering the shortages. This is a very easy cartridge for a beginner. BB
PS but, the message is to get one gun dialed in before tackling others. Stay focused.