Cool old boxes.
As to a vibratory cleaner setting off a round, I’m sure it’s happened but I can’t imagine a rounds tip having enough momentum to hammer a primer. Guess it’s possible. I dump them in by the 100 for 223 that is going into ARs since the lube can cause grief in cold weather.
I think the reason you didn’t see much difference from 71.7 and 72 is in the overall capacity of the case you’re less than about 1/2% probably even less. I’d incrementally keep creeping up in .5 grain increments. Your accuracy looks pretty good to me, so creeping up in charge weight should get...
For me it’s finding the charge that’s happy with a certain bullet weight. My neck tension may help since I do use a lot of bushing dies or Mandrels to keep that consistent. Also great brass helps a lot since it is consistent from shot to shot. Certain powders really shine in certain cases as...
Same as the others. I’ve used Hunter which is RL19 like in burn rate, same as H4831SC up through RL26 and even Retumbo with heavies. H1000 and 105’s is about as stable and accurate as it gets.
I have a few old boxes of 303 Savage somewhere in my mess. Think they were Remington white and green boxes but don’t hold me to it.
Great pics. I’d be tempted to put them old shells in a vibratory cleaner and see if they polish up.
I’ve been using PTs on and off since I was a kid reloading at 13-14 years old. I’m 48 this year. I’ve never struggled like you mention to get inch 3 shot groups with them. Sometimes no matter what I do I can’t get them smaller but MOA is really, good enough in most cases.
I’ve notice PTs have...
I doubt you’d notice too much difference out to 200 and likely further just using a BC that’s “close”. If you shoot longer you can reverse engineer and get an accurate BC if you ever needed.
I tend to think most of the rifles I buy will appreciate mostly. The Wood stocked ones with either nice blueing or great metal. The other ones with carbon stocks and more of a working rifle should maintain value at a minimum.
You can set the machine to drop at whatever you want. Meaning if the charge is meant for 60 grains a charge of 59.98 to 60.02 is acceptable and the machine green lights it. I fooled around with the settings a bit early on and this was the most useful for me.
I have a SuperTrickler Jim and can’t say enough good about it. Its scale is accurate to the .01 grain which is way more than I need but I know my charges are spot on. It’s fast as well, dumping 65 grains of 26 in about 7-10 seconds. Maybe crazy to spend that money but it does work great and is...
Mike always raved about VV powders. I started dabbling some and now buy more and more of them. 570 is king in the 7 Mashburn super. 540 is an awesome 223 powder with heavies. As was said the price hike on others made me look at VV powders and I’ve found no reason to dislike them. They make great...