- Nov 4, 2004
- 25,342
- 8,903
I would second the 160 AB, it's a great bullet.
JD338
JD338
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Yeah only reason I was specifically asking about the 168 ABLR is because I already bought them so I figured I'd work with those first and see what I can doI would second the 160 AB, it's a great bullet.
JD338
Yes, they will work.Well I made it to the store today unfortunately not as good as I thought, I only found one powder they had that I was looking which was H4831SC and for primers they didn't have anything worth it for Large Rifle but I ended up with Magnum Large Rifle CCI 250's will those work for what I'm looking for?
That's the plan luckily we have a close friend who has reloaded for years so he is gonna give me a couple lessons before I really get out on my own but it's nice that I have all of the components now!Yup, Magnum primers are good.
H4831SC is a good powder. Time to roll some rounds off the press.
JD338
Thank you I appreciate all of the advice, I have had all of the equipment since last Christmas so I have been reading and researching since then to learn as much as possible now it's just about getting hands on with all of the learning I've done and get it figured out! Thanks again!Skeeter...
Welcome to the world of reloading. Nothing more gratifying in the shooting world than making your own ammo.
Shotgun to metallic, handgun or long gun...
Few things hobby related can match the euphoria achieved when loading your own ammunition.
That all said, and I don't mean to be Debby Downer but being new to the hobby allow me a few words you need to adhere to and have them become principles in your hobby.
Safe, safe, safe...be safe!!
I can't stress this enough.
READ, READ, AND READ SOME MORE
Anyone can slap together powder, primers and bullets and make it go bang. Even achieve "some" accuracy.
If you want the tightest of groups/accuracy possible that your rifle and you can get...
that begins with you, the reloader.
Consistency and attention to detail is the key. The prep work and being meticulous.
The more consistent you are the more consistent your ammo will perform.
Words like exact and sure should be a theme you reload by.
Organization...as in how many firings your cases have in them and keeping track of that.
You can have the greatest primer powder combo but if you're using cases with varying lengths then you're not seeing the best results possible. Make sure your experimental load is with cases of the exact length.
Your powder charge..
If you're trying to hit 54.2 (example) grains then you want every charge to be 54.2 grains. Not 54, not 54.5, but 54.2 EXACT.
You don't have to be as meticulous as a competitive BR shooter but little things like I mentioned above will help you in determining if a particular load combo is bad, good or great.
Just try and load the same exact round each and every round.
DO NOT DISREGARD PUBLISHED DATA.....mfg's spend a lot of money with engineers and equipment to give you safe reloading data.
There used to be a lot of chatter from the "Billy Bob" types that say whatever the book says you can go over that by a few grains.
DO NOT DO THAT!
If you've never heard that expression, great! If you HAVE heard that DO NOT do it.
SAFETY...that word?
Be SAFE!
Pressure signs....
You need to read up on pressure signs.
A sticky bolt.
When you fire a round with too much pressure your bolt will become really difficult to open. Might feel impossible to open.
Crater marks on your primer. After firing and the bolt opens normal make sure to look at the primer. Crater marks indicates too much pressure.
There are tons of image examples on the inTRAnet of a cratered primer.
What kind of equipment do you have? It's not about brand X vs brand y but do you have everything you need or will need?
There are many rekoaders on this forum with decades experience. If you run into any issues just ask.
Be safe and enjoy this new to you but highly addictive hobby.
Good luck.
Hey Gerry I appreciate it i actually have a custom rifle that I got built by Pierce Engineering in Lansing Michigan, it has their lightweight Shadow action and a Mullerworks cut rifled barrel and an AG composite carbon fiber stock shot some factory Nosler 140 accubonds through it and the biggest group was around half MOA but I know that was me because the first group I shot were all touching each otherYou've gotten some excellent advice on reloading and also the 280 AI, lots of great people here willing to help out. There's a good chance you'll find some good loads with the components you have already. Maybe I missed it but what kind of rifle is your 280 AI?
The Garmin Xero is highly recommendedIf you don’t have one
Get a chrony…
That is the exact one I plan to getThe Garmin Xero is highly recommended
JD338
I second, third and 4th this.I will add that it's best to have 2-3 reloading manuals for cross reference. Any load data one gets from friends, internet, forums, etc. should always be crossed referenced with your own reloading manuals.
JD338