Those photos....did you thread Granddad's boer war Enfield??? That's one of the sootiest crappiest muzzle photos I've ever seen,and I sometimes shoot black smelly powder.
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Those photos....did you thread Granddad's boer war Enfield??? That's one of the sootiest crappiest muzzle photos I've ever seen,and I sometimes shoot black smelly powder.
These are extremely affordable, half the price. Should stabilise well in a 1:10 - SG of about 1.45 at 2900. 59 cents a bullet!
https://www.deltamike.co.nz/product/...-btsp-100-box/
Regardless of whether or not the bipod is contributing to the outliers, the idea with load testing is to eliminate as much as possible all other variables and not deliberately maintain any from a hunting scenario.
Then you can have confidence as to whether the spread is due to the load or something else.
When you check your zero there is some validity in that thinking, but introducing hunting variables to load testing is a pathway to unreliable conclusions.
Why use a front bag?, Bipod resting on a hard surface can throw lateral flyers, most commonly to the left for right handed shooters if the rifle torques during recoil. A front bag would help to isolate this as a variable so you can eliminate whether or not it is a factor. Once you quantify that, you can draw more reliable conclusions about your load data.
After you have found load data that you are happy with, zero the rifle with as much hunting variables recreated as you like.
At very least put bipod legs on soft mat. Don't push them forwards into hard bench.put off hand on forestock and hold down and rearwards like you would do for any shot NOT using bipod...and clean your barrel.
Yeah was thinking similar. Too many suggestions to try all ends up chasing your tail.
I don't know why we get so excited about lumps of copper and lead. The old CAC 243 lead tipped bullets worked just fine. As did the older lead tipped and hollow point 303.
If the SST was the only bullet available to use the deer would still die and the earth keep spinning.
@Zedrex
Yep give it a clean.
Those pictures (the in focus ones) show that you are on the way to rotting the end of your muzzle. You can see it with those oxide looking stains. Carbon attracts moisture and eats the steel.
Just wiping the threads and pulling a dry bore snake through when you get home each time will go a long way to reducing that rot.
Clean it to shiny steel and take some more pics for me.
Against front upstand....so not free recoiling either.... Between pig n a poke. But what do I know??? Missed a deer this morning,75 ish yards and only half a head showing about to bolt.....useless.