philcox
WKR
Based on the Hornady podcast about group sizes, @Formidilosus “painless load dev” post, and the @Shoot2Hunt podcast. I have tried to summarize of all of that information. Correction of my understanding, were I got it wrong, is appreciated.
Process:
Note on step 4: the Hornady guy said that you should do this like you Hunt. o if you shoot three shots out of your hunting rifle, then don’t shoot it for a while, the 10 shots should be in groups of three, and either let it rest, or shoot it another day. Just make sure that you’re using the same point of aim, so the groups can be measured together. There is another thread that talks about hot and cold bore shooting, in which it appears that it doesn’t matter, and you could shoot all 10 rounds in the same sitting (correct @Formidilosus ?), and essentially have the same statistical group that you would if you went day after day, or let the barrel cool.
There is an assumption in the latter discussion, that the components you have are quality rise. I think the Hornady podcast, would be applicable, whether you had quality components or not.
Update: Episode 37 from Shoot2Hunt with the Hornady guys was valuable too.
Process:
- Define what you realistically want (need?) out of a rifle and load.
- Pick quality components that should likely give you what you are looking for
- Load it up. Try to be consistent, but don’t go OCD on minute details (charge weight and seating depth - small deviations are not the issue)
- Shoot a group of 10 and see if you get the minimum (e.g., fps) or max (e.g., MOA) defined in step 1. If so, go with that and shoot. If not …
- Make sure everything is tight and proper clearances. Drop 1g and repeat 3&4
- If still nothing, find a different bullet and repeat 2-5
- If still nothing works, either get a new barrel or maybe try a recommended factory load that the barrel manufacturer recommends
Note on step 4: the Hornady guy said that you should do this like you Hunt. o if you shoot three shots out of your hunting rifle, then don’t shoot it for a while, the 10 shots should be in groups of three, and either let it rest, or shoot it another day. Just make sure that you’re using the same point of aim, so the groups can be measured together. There is another thread that talks about hot and cold bore shooting, in which it appears that it doesn’t matter, and you could shoot all 10 rounds in the same sitting (correct @Formidilosus ?), and essentially have the same statistical group that you would if you went day after day, or let the barrel cool.
There is an assumption in the latter discussion, that the components you have are quality rise. I think the Hornady podcast, would be applicable, whether you had quality components or not.
Update: Episode 37 from Shoot2Hunt with the Hornady guys was valuable too.
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