- Thread Starter
- #21
It's good to see a post on most any forum which speaks of tuning a load. To so many, it's unheard of since box ammo is good enough. And those that do reload, just load what a manual prints.
I have shot competition benchrest for 25+ years, and tuning is the name of the game. You can have a custom rifle built with the best of the best, but if it's out of tune, it can shoot as poor;y as a production rifle. But learn what it likes, and it makes your day!
I too am a competition BR shooter. I shoot 1000 yd BR. There is simply no shortcut to thorough tuning. If I do not make the extra effort and obsess over things like repeatability and ES when doing my initial tuning at short range (200 or 300 yds), then I won't be able to successfully tweak the load at 1000 the day before the match.
We all do things a little differently. While it's important to get input from others, it is critical to not talk yourself out of following your instincts--like I did at my last match.
When finding a load, whether for a hunting rifle or an LR BR rifle, we need to find as wide of a node as we can if we want it to repeat in varying conditions. For a hunting rifle at 100 yds, a load series that shoots 3/4, 5/8, 3/4 when testing powder charges or seating depths is much better that a load series that shoots 1", 1/4", 1". That 1/4" group will not likely repeat. If I had a nickel for every time I have seen that.......
So we need to resist the "wallet group" and look for consistency if we want to be successful when shooting a hunting or a competition rifle.