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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: September 9, 2008
Location: Woooooshington
Posts: 1,797
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"Geezer tech" - Making a powder chart
Recently, I've noticed on this and other forums that there are more and more target rifle shooters taking loading equipment to the range. Good for you!
I've also noticed that few recreational shooters know what a powder chart is. For decades (centuries... millennia?), competition, varmint and bench shooters have loaded at the range, and have developed ways to make the process quick, easy and very precise. When you consider that nearly all competitive benchrest shooters load at the range, and that most all "short" distance accuracy records are held by benchrest shooters... you start to get the idea that loading at the range might be advantageous. You get to adjust your load for the gun, the conditions, the temperature... or just for the he!! of it, to see what happens. The less stuff you take to the range to reload, the better. The faster you can make changes to a load, the better. A powder chart helps in both those areas. I'm not going to write about the equipment or the process of precision reloading... I've already done that here. What I am going to write about is how to make a powder measure throw chart. To begin, I'm going to assume you know the basics of reloading and that you are using a powder appropriate for your cartridge. Next, I'm going to assume you have a good highly repeatable powder measure with a nice increment range. A Redding BR-30 or something similar (or better) would be a good starting point. The BR-30, if used correctly and consistently can throw charges with no more than 1 tenth of a grain variance. If your powder measure or your skill at using it is somewhat sketchy... then this isn't going to work very well and you might as well stop reading now, or maybe buy one of them battery powered electric auto measure/scale thingies they make these days. Man... that last sentence makes me sound like I'm a 90 year old curmudgeon don't it? ![]() Oh yeah... the last thing I'm going to assume is that you're an adult who will take responsibility for their own actions and not blame me if you do something stupid. ![]()
That's it... take it for what it is, Interweb info from some guy you don't know. ![]() Cheers, C |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 21, 2002
Location: Transplanted from Montana
Posts: 2,311
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Before we take any advice on bench rest shooting from you, please list the benchrest competitions you have won.
I PRESUME you have have entered a great number of benchrest matches. Name the 10 most recent matches in which you shot. Since you took so much ink to explain measuring powder by weight, WHY???? I don't know any serious benchresters that measure their powder by weight. |
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: November 8, 2007
Posts: 2,001
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A couple of comments on the OP's post. One is that the powder measure is probably going to be sensitive to vibration. Throwing charges in your basement, with your standard routine of bumping the measure, handle, bench, etc., may get you consistent charges, while trying to do the same near an outdoor firing line could change things substantially, both with respect to the average weight thrown and the variations among individual charges. Wind-caused vibrations, other people banging the bench, even the concussion of some of the big cartridges being fired nearby MIGHT settle the powder differently. How would you know?
Taking a scale to the range has its own problems. Balance beam scales are notoriously sensitive to breezes, and it turns-out that electronic scales are, too. When I want to do load development at the range, I usually pre-measure the charge weights that I MIGHT want at home and put each in a carefully marked small glass bottle. But, I am not doing a match that way. If I HAD to measure powder at the range, I think I would use my dipper technique with a set of dippers that were calibrated in the same manner that the OP calibrated his measure settings. It is a lot less sensitve to vibrations other than my bumps of the dipper handle on the powder tub to settle the powder before I level the scoop with a straight edge. But, if the wind was blowing the powder out of my dipping tub or measure, I wouldn't be doing that, either. SL1 |
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