H4350 - am I doing it wrong?

Joined
Aug 29, 2022
So this is just kind of a random thing I thought I'd throw out for discussion and see what kind of feedback I get. I've seen a great deal of praise of H4350 over the years, particularly for use in cartridges like 30-06, 7x57, and 6.5 Creedmoor. So every time I get a new rifle for which it should in theory be good stuff, I give it a good solid try (1/2lb or so worth of experiments), and with only one exception, all I've ever gotten is surprisingly low velocity, surprisingly high pressure at those low velocities, and shockingly poor accuracy using H4350.

The one exception was my 7x57 with the Shillen barrel - if I got the seating depth perfect (0.050 off the lands) and used a light-ish charge, would shoot 140 accubonds pretty decently (around 0.8-ish MOA), but only that load and only at that seating depth.

I feel like my reloading skills are reasonable enough - I've had a number of 308's that would drill 5 to 15 round groups as one ragged hole when fed with Varget or R15, a couple of 223's that likewise loved life with Varget or AR-Comp, etc.

Back to H4350 - to be fair, none of the 30-06's I've had (not even the Tikkas) were better than 1.25 MOA with a well tuned load of R16 or IMR4831 or even Varget with light bullets - but with H4350, they were 2 to 3 or more MOA guns and ran bullets about 100 to 250 FPS slower than the load data or QuickLoad indicated it should before the primers started coming out flatter than I was comfortable with in terms of heating the loads up further.

So what gives - have I just had a string of bad luck to have more than half a dozen rifles in a row that don't "like" H4350? Am I doing it wrong as a reloader when playing with H4350 (but not when playing with other powders)? I dunno - 20 years of reloading later, it still remains a mystery to me.

What says the Internet?
 
It’s never been a go-to powder for me either for basically the same reasons. I know folks have good luck with it. I never have.
 
Is it a issue with how your storing it? Just thinking outloud
I wouldn't think so - my powder is kept in the factory containers, in an indoor closet (0 sunlight exposure), with ambient humidity held around 50% and an environment that doesn't get hotter than about 80 or colder than about 60. I have also noticed no difference between the behavior of a fresh pound or a pound I've had in the closet for year or two.
 
I wouldn't think so - my powder is kept in the factory containers, in an indoor closet (0 sunlight exposure), with ambient humidity held around 50% and an environment that doesn't get hotter than about 80 or colder than about 60. I have also noticed no difference between the behavior of a fresh pound or a pound I've had in the closet for year or two.
Ok. Definitely probably not a storage issue then.
 
It’s not unheard of to get a wonky lot that doesn’t shoot well. I forget if it was here or another forum and a guy had multiple pounds of inaccurate lot of powder. I said give it or throw it away, he mixed it with as many pounds of a good lot and now has twice as much inaccurate powder. It’s hard to justify buying another jug of something that hasn’t worked well.

I’ve used it with light bullets in a 338 and accuracy wasn’t bad, velocities were just so so. Heavy bullets in 375 H&H worked well enough - it was mainly used with iron sights, but the few groups shot with it were as good as other powders.

It does seem to be one of those powders that everyone should have, but it might stay on the shelf for the most part.
 
Never tried it in -06. Might have to give it a try.

H4350 is fantastic for me in my 6.5 Creeds and my .243. Not the fastest but I honestly don't care about velocity. So long as it's consistent and close to where it should be for the cartridge.
 
H4350 has been my go to in the 30-06 and 6.5CM. It might not give absolute top velocity numbers, but the accuracy, consistency in SDs, and across wide temperature variations have been superb.

Last string I shot with a Tikka SL 6.5 CM. H4350,Alpha brass, Tula LRP, 147ELD-IMG_1614.png
 
Every rifle is different and even same brands, model and caliber can (and probably will) shoot the same exact loads differently. Mavbe your rifle just doesn't like the powder.

I've had better luck in my 309-06 with 4895.
 
Back
Top