Dougfir
Beginner
- Mar 2, 2018
- 74
- 0
I've been reading a bunch about OAL and would like to bounce what I think I've learned, off all you very experienced handloaders. My understanding is:
For the same powder charge, increasing OAL will reduce pressure and velocity (unless you touch the lands, in which case you could cause a pressure spike).
For the same powder charge, decreasing OAL will increase pressure and velocity.
However, increasing OAL creates more capacity, so by using a longer OAL, when working up a load, you can use more powder and get more velocity from the same pressure level. So, in effect, using a longer OAL than is published in a manual means that your potential velocity is greater and the pubished max load should go up slightly (I'm guessing that quantifying this is one of the things that Quick Loads is nice for).
Does this sound right to everyone?
For the same powder charge, increasing OAL will reduce pressure and velocity (unless you touch the lands, in which case you could cause a pressure spike).
For the same powder charge, decreasing OAL will increase pressure and velocity.
However, increasing OAL creates more capacity, so by using a longer OAL, when working up a load, you can use more powder and get more velocity from the same pressure level. So, in effect, using a longer OAL than is published in a manual means that your potential velocity is greater and the pubished max load should go up slightly (I'm guessing that quantifying this is one of the things that Quick Loads is nice for).
Does this sound right to everyone?