A few discussions on load development recently so whoever wants to follow along with me and give advice is welcome.
I wanted a middle of the road toughness bullet for max shot of 500 yards at elk. Something that would be easy to find a good load for. I had good performance from the Sierra 165 SBT on cow elk before so I just went with the 180gr SBT.
Remington 700 BDL Left Hand .30-06. DIY Devcon and pillar bedding.
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Hand me down R-P brass from my father. Trimmed, chamfered, deburred, primer pocket uniformed, flash hole doohickey.
WLR Primers
H4350
Found load data online. Sierras load data was significantly lower than noslers and Hodgdon. Hodgdon data was specifically for Sierra bullet so I went with it.
The bullet has a long boat tail and I didn't feel like I could really seat it any longer than book length and get much bearing surface in the neck. According to my measurements I have a little less than .30" of bearing surface in the neck. I loaded to book length.
I loaded 1 cartridge of 52, 53, and 54 grains to "work up" and make sure things were progressing safely without using up components. Then I went in .5 gr increments from 54.5-56 (3 shot groups). Then .3 gr increments from 56.3 to the boom max of 57.5 (3 shot groups). This got me from something definitely safe to book max in 30 shots, with 3 shot groups over a good range and .3gr increments in the region I hoped to end up in.
57.5gr seemed awfully close to 100% capacity with my casings.
I wanted a middle of the road toughness bullet for max shot of 500 yards at elk. Something that would be easy to find a good load for. I had good performance from the Sierra 165 SBT on cow elk before so I just went with the 180gr SBT.
Remington 700 BDL Left Hand .30-06. DIY Devcon and pillar bedding.

Hand me down R-P brass from my father. Trimmed, chamfered, deburred, primer pocket uniformed, flash hole doohickey.
WLR Primers
H4350
Found load data online. Sierras load data was significantly lower than noslers and Hodgdon. Hodgdon data was specifically for Sierra bullet so I went with it.
The bullet has a long boat tail and I didn't feel like I could really seat it any longer than book length and get much bearing surface in the neck. According to my measurements I have a little less than .30" of bearing surface in the neck. I loaded to book length.
I loaded 1 cartridge of 52, 53, and 54 grains to "work up" and make sure things were progressing safely without using up components. Then I went in .5 gr increments from 54.5-56 (3 shot groups). Then .3 gr increments from 56.3 to the boom max of 57.5 (3 shot groups). This got me from something definitely safe to book max in 30 shots, with 3 shot groups over a good range and .3gr increments in the region I hoped to end up in.
57.5gr seemed awfully close to 100% capacity with my casings.
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