I would think that the maybe annealed cases were gripping the bullet tighter. Notice any difference in seating the bullets? Or with the annealed cases the brass was "stickier".
We already have them in NE Washington. One had to be relocated from about 15 miles north of Colville last fall because it took to liking the taste of chicken
They will be manufacturing them in Gillette for distribution elsewhere. Possibly for powering Trona mines that consume lots of electricity. Small portable semi-transported nuclear reactors are either already in use or pretty far along in development. We need all the help we can get for power...
The Romeo 5 comes with both a high mount and low mount, the low sits about the same as a scope on the rail.
Haven't seen a Red Dot with hold over, was thinking the RDS did, but can see now that it is a dial. Maybe find something with a dot and a circle and use the bottom of the circle?
Be sure to hold onto the forend when shooting, can't just rest on a bag and hold on to the grip of the stock and expect a good group from a sub 6# rifle. I have one in .308 and if I don't have a secure hold, the groups open up considerably.
450 Kodiak is a sweet little rig, plenty of power to haul 2 people, smaller, lighter chassis than the 700. 550 and 660 no longer made, only 450 and 700 both in Kodiak and Grizzly, both can be had with power steering.
The Leupold RDS 223 has hold over marks but don't know how well it would line up with ML speeds.
I am looking to do the same and have both the RDS and the Sig Romeo 5, both set up for a rail and the Romeo 5 may work with irons also. Washington is now allowing 1x scopes or red dots on...