ThirtyAughtChris
FNG
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2024
- Messages
- 8
Howdy Brothers,
I’ve had a curved grip Browning BLR chambered in 30-06 for about 25 years. I’ve experimented with it enough to think I know it well. I’m almost over confident with it. That’s why I’m slightly concerned. That gun has made some quite impressive groups over the years. It normally makes 5/8” groups at 100 yards with several different bullet/powder/primer/brass combinations. Its relationship with factory ammo is not so good, 1.5” usually. The only exception to that were the “light magnum 30-06” loads that were long ago discontinued by Hornady. It put those into 3/4”. I still have some of those. Anyway… I loaded up some Barnes LRX 175 grain with 55 grains of H4350, COAL 3.390 (about 10 thousandths from the lands in that gun) in R-P 3 times fired brass. The chrono avg of 3 rounds was 2813. 100+ fps quicker than expected. Slightly flattened primers (which didn’t concern me because every White River Primer I’ve used has been identical in every platform and round), no resistance on the lever, no extractor mark, no problems at all. All of the other guns and ammo shot across that chrono the same day were exactly where I expected them. It was 22°, 5000 ft elevation, 30% humidity. I thought I should investigate the situation so when I got home I disassembled 5 of those rounds, measured the powder charges on a freshly calibrated digital scale, and individually double checked them on a beam scale which agreed. Three were perfect, two were 2/10 grain over. It seems too good to be true. Any thoughts?
I’ve had a curved grip Browning BLR chambered in 30-06 for about 25 years. I’ve experimented with it enough to think I know it well. I’m almost over confident with it. That’s why I’m slightly concerned. That gun has made some quite impressive groups over the years. It normally makes 5/8” groups at 100 yards with several different bullet/powder/primer/brass combinations. Its relationship with factory ammo is not so good, 1.5” usually. The only exception to that were the “light magnum 30-06” loads that were long ago discontinued by Hornady. It put those into 3/4”. I still have some of those. Anyway… I loaded up some Barnes LRX 175 grain with 55 grains of H4350, COAL 3.390 (about 10 thousandths from the lands in that gun) in R-P 3 times fired brass. The chrono avg of 3 rounds was 2813. 100+ fps quicker than expected. Slightly flattened primers (which didn’t concern me because every White River Primer I’ve used has been identical in every platform and round), no resistance on the lever, no extractor mark, no problems at all. All of the other guns and ammo shot across that chrono the same day were exactly where I expected them. It was 22°, 5000 ft elevation, 30% humidity. I thought I should investigate the situation so when I got home I disassembled 5 of those rounds, measured the powder charges on a freshly calibrated digital scale, and individually double checked them on a beam scale which agreed. Three were perfect, two were 2/10 grain over. It seems too good to be true. Any thoughts?