It's a 243. It should put three shots into a cloverleaf group at hundy.....someone tell me I'm wrong.
Printable View
It's a 243. It should put three shots into a cloverleaf group at hundy.....someone tell me I'm wrong.
It's proving you wrong Micky. There's no reason a 243 can not suffer any of the problems that surface with any other calibre or rifle.
So change two things. Try federal blue box..maybe 80 GRN if it's made....and the nut behind the butt. If it's still spraying bullets around like a mad woman's shit....start looking elsewhere other than ammo.
Until you have "issues" with factory ammo availability (and cost) and decide that handloading resolves both those issues......and open a can of worms! That being said, it's all part of the process and one has to be willing to accept the pain of walking through the fire to emerge, phoenix like, with a new skill set :thumbsup:
LOL! This weekend will prove/disprove the projectile of choice 2 x 10 of the 42gr SST, 2 x 10 of the deer season and (just because it's there) 2 x 10 of the Fiocchi with a 1 x 10 of the 42gr SST by another shooter, it's also occurred to me that maybe I should clean the barrel prior....but then does this introduce another unknown variable? The can of worms grows!
This why I asked for "someone" .....I personally haven't run into an in accurate .243. hell my 2nd encounter was shooting goats with neighbour thirty years ago. We ran out of ammo so he broke out whackamole,scooped in powder and made another fourty rounds. We went back out and kept shooting out to 300ish..... Hardly precision reloading... But by hoki it snorted goats. Another mate maybe twenty five years back had Remington jammomatic that shot well with any load. My old reloading mentor had tikka that boringly shot under 3/4" groups...I've seen the groups and load data.... So my "data" set is limited but was enough to make impression on me.thtee VERY different rifles.
I'm not sure if it's "new wave" as such, but I think the gist of some of the current discussion is (rediscovering) that correlation doesn't equal causation.
Many methods of the past 'work', just maybe not in the way that people thought they worked, and maybe there are more efficient ways to reach the end goal (i.e. by playing with the variables that show the most effect).
All this isn't to say everyone needs to send hundreds of rounds down range to verify any change; however it does suggest that comparing one small group to another, is unlikely to tell you very much about the effect of the variable being manipulated.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy479p8H0AE
Here's one goto 5 mins 30 in where he mentions (briefly) changing the charge to tune the arrival of the bullet at the muzzle to be in the middle of the harmonic wave (my terminology might be off) I'm not saying this is gospel but it was another "piece" that made me ask the question around harmonics
Absolutely, I raised harmonics not as a THIS IS THE PROBLEM but asking if IT COULD BE? And then everyone lost their shit (shrugs) I guess that's one of the issues to starting any new branch of knowledge, it's easy to be overwhelmed by the "everythings" that can be involved. I'm clear that I need to focus on the basics of loading without getting allll the way down the rabbit hole as all I want to achieve is a handload that will perform similar to the factory load I've been hunting with successfully out to 300m
These days, .243 is all I use and I don't have anything to do with all that daft crap requiring a degree in astrophysics.
Fill the case to the top with whatever
is the least dubious looking black/grey stuff, jam whatever pill is lying about on the bench in it, smack it down a bit with a hammer if the press won't get it done, and then go shoot stuff with it. Simple really.
My freezers stay full and the astrophysics don't hurt my head like this thread does.
To be honest, I find reloading rather easy to get good results. It only has to be as hard as you want it to be.
Watch this one from him as well and give it some robust thought:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ogv_kFNqemA
Watched and most of his commentary is around his view on barrel tuners and why he doesn't use them, he also touches on other variables (temperature) that, if I'm understanding him correctly make barrel tuners like everything else inconsistent in their effect on accuracy and I am aware that there are many enviromental variables that will impact grouping
My understanding of your comment in response to "There is plenty of evidence out there where shooters have experienced groups converging and diverging as they move up through load weights in as little as 0.2gr increments with a variance of sub MOA to 1.5MOA over 3 load increments.- Feel free to provide that data and shut us up, or drink."
Is that you were dismissing varying load to tune harmonics was a load of old bs and in both of Marks video's he alludes to charge weight, seat depth as being methods to tune a load and barrel harmonics in order to try and have the projectile exit the muzzle during the barrels "dead" moment which reinforces my thought that charge weight MUST have an influence on grouping.....BUT I also think that what you were maybe trying to say is that harmonics are not going to have a marked effect on grouping at the distance I was shooting the test loads...and that's a possibility BUT it's also possible that it may have an effect AND it MAY be that that effect is negligible. I think I asked IF harmonics could have an impact and when questioned I replied with the "plenty of evidence out there" which there is but I didn't have the context of "over what distance" Marks video mentions a 1/4" difference but again no context of over what distance...so it's back to insufficient data
Agreed, I started on this path to "replace" my preferred factory ammo due to cost/availability and I suppose I could have just found another factory offering BUT that cost element. Starting down the rabbit hole was easy enough, I identified what I thought (from my limited research) would be a suitable replacement projectile (as I can't source Win Deer Season projectiles, even though they are available to buy stateside) and "we" worked up some loads with one load showing good grouping and it was pointed out that I needed to shoot bigger groups to prove the load, which seems reasonable and that's what I'll be doing next.....we'll see where that takes me in the pursuit of the "perfect" load. In the meantime I'm getting some good schooling and lively debate!