tddeangelo
Handloader
- May 18, 2011
- 2,023
- 20
Talking with Scotty, I got to wondering if my Hornady dies for me 300WSM might not be part of what the rifle has seemed to elude shooting truly consistent, good, groups for me. It has, to date, shot an exceptional group, but then mediocre groups when trying to confirm that the load that shot so well would do so again.
Case in point.... I worked on a load of 68.0gr RL19 under a 180gr PT, OAL set to 2.890". Initial run gave me a group somewhere around a 1/2" and I was thrilled. Subsequent groups to verify printed more like 1.2"-1.5". This has been the story with this rifle since I got it.
So, with the Cabela's near me running a sale for 15% off RCBS dies, I got a new set of RCBS dies for the 300WSM and decided to run a little experiment.
First the data, then the target pic.
Actually, let me give the setup first. I used the load mentioned above.... 68.0gr RL19, 180gr PT, and OAL of 2.890". I used Federal 215 primers out of the same pack. I used Nosler brass out of the same age/number of loadings batch. Trim length was set to the same (I forget it offhand, but I measured them to be sure of consistency).
I full-length sized 6 brass, primed them, and loaded that load, all done on the RCBS dies. I used a Sharpie to record load data and which die maker's set was used, and I did this on the case itself to avoid confusion.
I then did the same for 6 more cases, using the Hornady dies.
I use an old Lyman beam scale, which I verified/reset to zero every three charges.
I measured EVERY round for OAL and they were consistent.
Yesterday, I went to the range. I fired all 12 in groups of three, allowing the barrel to return to (to my touch at least) ambient temp before firing another group. I also ran all rounds over the chrono.
Results of two groups of 3 per die maker:
RCBS- Ave. Velocity = 2919fps, group size average = 0.975 (including a called pulled shot). Vel spread = 13 fps
Hornady- Ave. Velocity = 2874, group size average = 1.25 (including all shots, no called pulled shots), Vel spread = 44fps.
Granted, I would need a LOT more data to conclusively prove anything, but this was really surprising and eye-opening data for me. The marked increase in consistency in velocity was interesting.
Target pic:
I shot the RCBS loads on Dots #1 and 3, Hornady on 5 and 7. Of interest....Hornady produced the smallest group AND the largest, but that's the kind of thing I've been seeing from this setup. RCBS produced two decent groups, with #3 having the called pulled shot (left, high). Even so, it wasn't pulled hard or far, and to keep from potentially "rationalizing" that shot away, lol, I included it in the data.
For those curious, Dots 2, 4, and 6 were shot with my 300H&H, decreasing OAL by a quarter turn on the seating stem on the die. Looks like Dot 4 has the best "compromise" there, with that group measuring a touch over an inch. I still have work to do on that rifle, though. The bolt lifted hard on the last portion of the lift, which that rifle does just in general, but it shouldn't be THAT difficult to open the bolt, and I was not thrilled with how it was. It seems this rifle gets that issue very quickly and well before max charges are reached. Even so, that was moving a 200gr AB at 2700, which isn't shabby.
I may restart the whole process with the same 180PT I'm using in the 300WSM. Makes bullet stocking a lot easier for me if they both run the same thing, anyway, and that might give me a better experience with that rifle. At any rate, there's work to be done there yet.
The torn-off section was not me hiding bad groups, lol...that was my dad's section of the target where he'd shot his 243 at our range session, and he kept the targets. As some keen-eyed observers will notice, I've used that piece of cardboard before to hold targets. My wife laughs at me....I don't toss cardboard I use for target backing until it looks like someone machine gunned it....twice. I can say, though, that one particular piece of cardboard that I used for a LONG time on the rifle range did succumb finally when I used it to pattern turkey loads.
Case in point.... I worked on a load of 68.0gr RL19 under a 180gr PT, OAL set to 2.890". Initial run gave me a group somewhere around a 1/2" and I was thrilled. Subsequent groups to verify printed more like 1.2"-1.5". This has been the story with this rifle since I got it.
So, with the Cabela's near me running a sale for 15% off RCBS dies, I got a new set of RCBS dies for the 300WSM and decided to run a little experiment.
First the data, then the target pic.
Actually, let me give the setup first. I used the load mentioned above.... 68.0gr RL19, 180gr PT, and OAL of 2.890". I used Federal 215 primers out of the same pack. I used Nosler brass out of the same age/number of loadings batch. Trim length was set to the same (I forget it offhand, but I measured them to be sure of consistency).
I full-length sized 6 brass, primed them, and loaded that load, all done on the RCBS dies. I used a Sharpie to record load data and which die maker's set was used, and I did this on the case itself to avoid confusion.
I then did the same for 6 more cases, using the Hornady dies.
I use an old Lyman beam scale, which I verified/reset to zero every three charges.
I measured EVERY round for OAL and they were consistent.
Yesterday, I went to the range. I fired all 12 in groups of three, allowing the barrel to return to (to my touch at least) ambient temp before firing another group. I also ran all rounds over the chrono.
Results of two groups of 3 per die maker:
RCBS- Ave. Velocity = 2919fps, group size average = 0.975 (including a called pulled shot). Vel spread = 13 fps
Hornady- Ave. Velocity = 2874, group size average = 1.25 (including all shots, no called pulled shots), Vel spread = 44fps.
Granted, I would need a LOT more data to conclusively prove anything, but this was really surprising and eye-opening data for me. The marked increase in consistency in velocity was interesting.
Target pic:
I shot the RCBS loads on Dots #1 and 3, Hornady on 5 and 7. Of interest....Hornady produced the smallest group AND the largest, but that's the kind of thing I've been seeing from this setup. RCBS produced two decent groups, with #3 having the called pulled shot (left, high). Even so, it wasn't pulled hard or far, and to keep from potentially "rationalizing" that shot away, lol, I included it in the data.
For those curious, Dots 2, 4, and 6 were shot with my 300H&H, decreasing OAL by a quarter turn on the seating stem on the die. Looks like Dot 4 has the best "compromise" there, with that group measuring a touch over an inch. I still have work to do on that rifle, though. The bolt lifted hard on the last portion of the lift, which that rifle does just in general, but it shouldn't be THAT difficult to open the bolt, and I was not thrilled with how it was. It seems this rifle gets that issue very quickly and well before max charges are reached. Even so, that was moving a 200gr AB at 2700, which isn't shabby.
I may restart the whole process with the same 180PT I'm using in the 300WSM. Makes bullet stocking a lot easier for me if they both run the same thing, anyway, and that might give me a better experience with that rifle. At any rate, there's work to be done there yet.
The torn-off section was not me hiding bad groups, lol...that was my dad's section of the target where he'd shot his 243 at our range session, and he kept the targets. As some keen-eyed observers will notice, I've used that piece of cardboard before to hold targets. My wife laughs at me....I don't toss cardboard I use for target backing until it looks like someone machine gunned it....twice. I can say, though, that one particular piece of cardboard that I used for a LONG time on the rifle range did succumb finally when I used it to pattern turkey loads.