TackDriver284
Handloader
- Feb 13, 2016
- 2,572
- 2,159
Following minimum and maximum loads is important when checking your powder charges in the reloading manual, most of us sticks to the minimum and maximum window, some of us, if you know what you are doing, like to push the bullet faster and keep tabs on the pressure signs such as sticky bolt lift, flat primers, split cases, etc. Reloading manuals have different charges / information and its where we make a decision " when to say Stop" and settle with a charge weight safely. As of today I found a tidy 3 shot group , .25 MOA, for my Sako lightweight 7 Mag with Shilen 26" barrel, used 140 Accubonds. Load was 66.7 grains of RL19 , lit with Fed215M and velocity is a strong 3240 fps with no pressure signs. The velocity reading was pretty high and how much more can you go? Does the sticky bolt / flat primers happen before the chamber even reaches maximum pressure? Just a thought and safety is priority one. Sometimes we tend to push it faster to see if there is a nice load for hunting which I like to do, but never have split a case or blew a primer before, ever in my 20 years of reloading.