Why do people load so hot?

I keep things simple.

I start in the middle of "book" in 0.3g increments and watch the brass / primer . I watch the pattern on the groups and see it swing from stringing horizontal / vertical then go round then close up.

Rinse swish repeat till I get up to a full grain less than book. If I find a node past there it's probably where I stop. The next node is possible with some powders and sometimes not with others.

If I keep going and see a scatter load, that's it I'm done. Pull everything else no regrets .
Primer squish next 0.3g on some powders like cfe 233 for one.

Go back and bracket by 0.1 increments the node and seating depth depending on bullet.

The book max references a brand of brass, it doesn't specify new or fire formed to their universal receiver running 1 in 12 twist in a standard 24 inch barrel. Using (223 example) from most.

Do any of you run 1 in 12 twist in a 24 inch barrel?

Watch your brass, primers and ass at the range and read the pattern from your barrel just for fun.
 
Back in 2020 I competed with a large frame AR in PRS Regional Gas division and learned a lot about pressure when it came to yearlong consistency with H4350 and Varget in a 6.5 Creedmoor. I don't recall the charge weight but settled on moving 140's with Varget in the mid 2600's and brought the regional season trophy home. Since then, I went back to open division with a bolt rifle and used the 6GT with Varget. I stayed in the 31.5-32.5 weight range over 6 barrels to make a consistent 2830fps load. Eventually I wanted to go slower and moved to a 6mm BR with 109 Hybrid's and 29 grains of Varget for 2725fps. For the past 9 months and 2367 rounds it has remained consistent and generally stays under a 5sd for any given shot string. Since slowing things down and jumping bullet's .055 or longer I have never had to retune a load in close to 10 barrels now. This in 6GT's, 6.5 Creedmoor, 6mmBR, 25GT and 6.5x47L. The exception was two barrels with tighter bores, which I will never do again. Otherwise, the loads have worked equally well in the next replacement barrel screwed on to the action provided the freebore was the same.

I love the amount you can see with the extra flight time when it comes to rifle sports... I also run a 25GT with 135 Hybrid's and a 6.5x47 with 135 A-tips in the mid 2600's for the same reason.

The looks can be priceless when speaking to shooters struggling with their combo that are running loads two or three hundred feet per second faster than you, and you just left them in the dust with a stage clean.

I have a feeling that a more modest load adds barrel life as well, but I have only shot out one-barrel and that was a 6GT that started to show signs at 3200 rounds and was definitively done at 3600ish when a 6 tenth windage shift occurred and I had lost about 60fps after cleaning... it still shot great though, LOL.
Great post. A 7mm-08 can push high BC bullet in that 2500-2600 range. Do you think there is point where the recoil is too much to make up for the extra flight time? It always seemed like the 6mm bullets don't have a real good b.c, the ballistics just looked good because of the velocity. I guess the 7mms might start running into action length problems also.
 
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IMHO the old “go up until I see pressure and then back down a few tenths” mantra = the Dunning-Kruger effect in practice.

These days I’m more concerned with how “slow” I can go and still get repeatable/reliable single-digit SDs over 20 shots and still print small groups, not max MV.

For years I was told and read that that meant you needed a high case fill ratio (and a higher MV) in order to be able to do that… then I got a fancy powder dropper that lets me load all my rounds to the nearest kernel and a chrono that I can attach to my gun and track every single shot if I want to… and I don’t believe that anymore. These guns are lasers more often than not without ever really having to do shit and I’ll probably never take a shot that maxes out the elevation in my scope, so there’s just no need to push them, and if you want them to do the same thing every single pull, batch after batch, I’d argue it’s best not to.
 
Back in 2020 I competed with a large frame AR in PRS Regional Gas division and learned a lot about pressure when it came to yearlong consistency with H4350 and Varget in a 6.5 Creedmoor. I don't recall the charge weight but settled on moving 140's with Varget in the mid 2600's and brought the regional season trophy home. Since then, I went back to open division with a bolt rifle and used the 6GT with Varget. I stayed in the 31.5-32.5 weight range over 6 barrels to make a consistent 2830fps load. Eventually I wanted to go slower and moved to a 6mm BR with 109 Hybrid's and 29 grains of Varget for 2725fps. For the past 9 months and 2367 rounds it has remained consistent and generally stays under a 5sd for any given shot string. Since slowing things down and jumping bullet's .055 or longer I have never had to retune a load in close to 10 barrels now. This in 6GT's, 6.5 Creedmoor, 6mmBR, 25GT and 6.5x47L. The exception was two barrels with tighter bores, which I will never do again. Otherwise, the loads have worked equally well in the next replacement barrel screwed on to the action provided the freebore was the same.

I love the amount you can see with the extra flight time when it comes to rifle sports... I also run a 25GT with 135 Hybrid's and a 6.5x47 with 135 A-tips in the mid 2600's for the same reason.

The looks can be priceless when speaking to shooters struggling with their combo that are running loads two or three hundred feet per second faster than you, and you just left them in the dust with a stage clean.

I have a feeling that a more modest load adds barrel life as well, but I have only shot out one-barrel and that was a 6GT that started to show signs at 3200 rounds and was definitively done at 3600ish when a 6 tenth windage shift occurred and I had lost about 60fps after cleaning... it still shot great though, LOL.
This is exactly what the "need for speed" crew is missing. Constantly pushing the bleeding edge and subsequently giving up consistency and staying in tune. But who care about modest, consistent loads and longer barrel life LOL?

Plus how can you have an exciting day at the range unless there is a slight temp bump and suddenly that "good load that only showed mildly flat primers but what 3 grains over book max" starts blowing primers left and right?
 
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Great post. A 7mm-08 can push high BC bullet in that 2500-2600 range. Do you think there is point where the recoil is too much to make up for the extra flight time? It always seemed like the 6mm bullets don't have a real good b.c, the ballistics just looked good because of the velocity. I guess the 7mms might start running into action length problems also.
I used this tool to make comparisons when giving the 6.5x47 and 25GT a serious look. https://bisonballistics.com/calculators/recoil

I could perceive a difference in felt recoil after about a .2-.3 pound difference with what the calculator was tabulating. That said, there is more to it than just numbers. I had been also playing with a 223 with heavy 85 and 88 grain bullets. It seemed each time I went up in bore size, even if the numbers were a close match, you could feel a difference. The larger the bore, the more snap I seemed to feel. I'm thinking a person would need one of those graphing units that Gavin at Ultimate Reloader has that shows you the energy over time to see it.

7mm's are interesting and I wouldn't mind trying one at some point.
 
Not everyone in the world plays known distance games. I.E A lot of hunters like speed because it extends their PB zero and increases their point and shoot range. There are also games where you need enough power to knock down the silhouettes.
Another consideration is bullet upset. Not necessary in target games, but more important in Hunting situations. I know of several mono metal manufacturers that recommend keeping impact velocity above 1700 - 1800 fps. If you are wanting that bullet to perform correctly at a given distance, it will need to be moving pretty fast at the muzzle.

This example would need a significant velocity boost to be effective beyond 350yds. With the previously stated upset velocity.
IMG_6878.jpeg
 
Not everyone in the world plays known distance games. I.E A lot of hunters like speed because it extends their PB zero and increases their point and shoot range. There are also games where you need enough power to knock down the silhouettes.
Nothing personal or an attempt to affront, but

Well that does not make a whole lot of sense. Using my load for my .25-06 using the Berger VLD 115 grain bullet at 3003FPS (its a slow barrel but a very accurate hunting barrel) the drop at 300 yards with a 200 yard zero is 6.5 inches. Going to 350 yards the drop is 11.8 inches or well out of the killing zone. Increasing that to 3103 which is really pushing the pressure gets me a grand total improvement of 0.8 of an inch drop. Killing the barrel for essentially no gain.

Not saying your statement is wrong. Lots of fellows push it to the max to get a better point blank range, but if they would look at the numbers, they would find how little they are actually benefitting.

So, I stand behind my initial position. If you need more power (or a longer point blank range) Get A Bigger Gun!

Caveat, I’ve been driving all day and now it’s time to unpack and a thunderstorm is brewing, plus the power is out at the house so I admit, being a bit grouchy. Just for honesty, my point blank range with that rifle is 250 yards and regardless of the tools available, that is the longest I feel I can properly assure a humane kill regardless of the tools available
 
The 180+ have a real high BC but the recoil with that much bullet is quite a bit more than a 105 or 140.

Its interesting to think of it as relation between both recoil and velocity. I wonder if action and scope flex play a role also.

The 223 is pretty easy to self spot, even at fairly close ranges shooting 50-55g bullets going 33-3400fps.

I used this tool to make comparisons when giving the 6.5x47 and 25GT a serious look. https://bisonballistics.com/calculators/recoil

I could perceive a difference in felt recoil after about a .2-.3 pound difference with what the calculator was tabulating. That said, there is more to it than just numbers. I had been also playing with a 223 with heavy 85 and 88 grain bullets. It seemed each time I went up in bore size, even if the numbers were a close match, you could feel a difference. The larger the bore, the more snap I seemed to feel. I'm thinking a person would need one of those graphing units that Gavin at Ultimate Reloader has that shows you the energy over time to see it.

7mm's are interesting and I wouldn't mind trying one at some point.
 
Nothing personal or an attempt to affront, but

Well that does not make a whole lot of sense. Using my load for my .25-06 using the Berger VLD 115 grain bullet at 3003FPS (its a slow barrel but a very accurate hunting barrel) the drop at 300 yards with a 200 yard zero is 6.5 inches. Going to 350 yards the drop is 11.8 inches or well out of the killing zone. Increasing that to 3103 which is really pushing the pressure gets me a grand total improvement of 0.8 of an inch drop. Killing the barrel for essentially no gain.

Not saying your statement is wrong. Lots of fellows push it to the max to get a better point blank range, but if they would look at the numbers, they would find how little they are actually benefitting.

So, I stand behind my initial position. If you need more power (or a longer point blank range) Get A Bigger Gun!

Caveat, I’ve been driving all day and now it’s time to unpack and a thunderstorm is brewing, plus the power is out at the house so I admit, being a bit grouchy. Just for honesty, my point blank range with that rifle is 250 yards and regardless of the tools available, that is the longest I feel I can properly assure a humane kill regardless of the tools available
It doesn't make sense because in your quite limited example 100fps doesn't make much diffrence in your opnion. In the context of PB zeros, speed makes it longer so I have to disagree. Also the context of the conversation when the comment was made, was that less speed is an advantage. The pont was there are times where more speed is an advantage also.


Sure people go to a bigger cartridge all the time to increase PB zero, they also shoot a lighter bullet. 22lr to 17hmr. It's the reason I suggest a 22-250 when someone wants a coyote rifle. And it's the reason i steer them toward 40-55g bullets.
 
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Another thread that I read with a phone, but needed a keyboard to respond properly.... I hate typing on those infernal phones.

There is a lot to digest here... so I'll throw out a few musing on some of the things I've read in the thread... and based on precision (and pliniking) reloading for about 45 years now... Including wildcatting, making cases, casting boolits, etc.

First, I saw the mention of 'lawyer loads' or how loading manuals show lower charges than they did decades ago. I'm fortunate enough to still have my loading manuals that, in some cases, date to the 1960's. With my pen-written notes in them and in some cases manuals I 'inherited' with others pen-written notes in them. And I will say that 1975 vs. 2025 manuals DO trend downwards in max loads. At a time when materials science, engineering, barrel technology, etc. are trending to more strength and the ability to handle more pressure. This may be for 'liability' reasons. It may be that powder formulations (chemistry and manufacturing processes have improved in 50 years, too!) may make powders more efficient. Measuring technology may be better and give better insights into pressure. Or components like cases and primer cups may have evolved for various reasons causing reloading manual 'authors' to recommend lower loads. So I can't say 'why' they are lower.

But when I am starting loading for a new cartridge or bullet weight, I don't just look at my 2023 reloading handbook (my most up-to-date) but I look at about 4 handbooks. And will often look online as well to see what their load numbers are for a given powder, bullet, primer combo. The more data points the better. I almost never look at what the cartridge case is. Because much of the data is for pretty generic cases and I'm often reloading strange stuff... ranging from custom-made cases to BMG to wildcats. Or military cases.

My loads always start well below max. For one, max is rarely the most accurate. Not 'never' but rarely. Second is that starting low lets me build up and watch for pressure signs and back off or say 'enough.' Signs I look for are pretty standard... hard bolt lift, flattened or cratered primers. Sometimes just load 'feels' not right. And usually too fast = not the most repeatable/accurate. So why would I even bother going near max loads. To quote, I think, Townsend Whelen "Only accurate rifles interest me." Big booms and maximum velocities are often an anathema to ultimate accuracy, so I just don't go there.

That said, especially these days there are folks who have 'reason' to go there. The ELR game is defiinitely changing people's perceptions of how cartridges need to be loaded and is as much a 'new' form of wildcatting as everyone playing with shoulder angles and case capacities in the 30's through the '50's. As I have said here, we are in a new "Golden Age" of wildcatting.

Competitions that require flat-shooting UKD targets. Extreme-range hunting (like prairie dog shooting back in the day spawned a revolution in flat-shooting high-pressure small calibers) for big game is also influencinig folks to push pressures and max limits. And new gun designs and barrel designs, metallurgy, case shapes, powder formulations, etc. are pushing pressures up... because they allow pressures to move up.

I've been saying for several years (and I know several folks who are echoing this, such as John Baker whose Structured Barrels are a neat new addition to shooting) that pressures are the next frontier of the precision rifle world. IMHO, we are going to see much higher pressures. In fact, we already are. Not long ago, the 6.5 Creedmoor was running about 60,000 or maybe a bit more PSI (I think in CUP -- Copper Units of Pressure still... but will talk PSI here.). That was considered HOT. But new military small arms cartridges like the .277 Fury (Sig developed a few years ago) are putting out 80,000 PSI in Hybrid cases (see other thread on hybrid cases here... it's interesting) And I don't think it will be long before we see some cartridges graduating from laboratory and into shooters hands... probably here on Snipers Hide... that are over 100,000 PSI pressure. Certainly the barrel, receiver, bolt lockup, case, etc. technologies exist to support such pressure. All that is needed is the demand for them.

First demand probably won't be the .mil or .le communities, but the competition community where a flatter-shooting, longer-range round will make it easier for competitors to gain an edge on UKD or ELR targets while minimizing scope adjustments or even eliminating the needs for prisms, extremely long vertical adjustment on scopes, etc. And the wildcatting community (if not the sporting arms SAAMI community) will be there pushing it.

All that said, for the average and ESPECIALLY the beginning handloader... hot loads are not your friends. They beat up you and your gear. They are rarely as accurate/repeatable as slightly slower loads. And there is a lot more room for error as you learn the craft of making really, really good precision ammunition to feed your rifle. So follow the LATEST reloading handbook numbers. Use others as reference if you are lucky enough to have older/other manuals. Use "Internet" data, but run it against the published factory data. Even the little pamphlets that some powder producers offer in lieu of 'full manuals/handbooks" are useful. Put all that data into your notebook (You DO have a notebook, right? To record everything in? Right? A Paper Notebook? That goes to the range with your databook??) and work your load from below max to find the sweet spot for your gun and your style of shooting.

That's basic beginning advice for anything! Before graduating to Formula 1, hopefully you master a go-Kart or an open wheel!... The same in reloading. Crawl, walk run.

BTW, I started reloading .38 SPL's by the hundreds as I was an early IPSC competitor in the 1980's before it got 'serious.' I used a Lee Load-All and hammered every cartridge into the die (with a hammer) and building my rounds that way. When I moved to a $23 Single Stage Bonanza Press as a high school senior in 1983-ish... it was like I'd suddenly joined NASA! Used that press exclusively until I expanded my reloading setup dramatically beginnnig in 2005... with a second press and a BMG press. And taking it to its ultimate level (see the reloading room thread) in 2014. In 2005 was when I got very, very bit by the precision rifle bug. And began to alter my loading from volume plinking, pistol and low-volume hunting rounds... to one-holers. (Plus a few years working in weapons development at GD was a PhD Education in small arms tech.)

Anyway, this is another interesting thread and has certainly brought out the 'point/counterpoint' nature of some of the discussions. But the OP had the right idea when he asked about Max loads. And hopefully there is some good info here to help guide his (and others) forays into handloading.

I like to say, too, that the reason I like shooting, especially precision shooting, is that it is one of the most pure, 'no-excuses' sports there is. It is you, the shooter, against physics. Period. It's not against other people. Or the weather. Or the game. Or anything else. It is you against physics. Because it is understanding the physics of internal, external and terminal ballistics that lets you put your round on your target a 'whatever' range. And do it again. And again. All those outside factors (wind, weather, mirage, heat, spin drift, etc. etc. etc.) are variables that YOU the shooter must master. And are all things affecting the relatively simple physics of bodies in motion. You must be master of them all. And when you are handloading, you are mastering a core part of the equation. Internal ballistics. And removing excuses (bad factor ammo, didn't fit my chamber, too much jump to the rifling, blah, blah blah) As a handloader, you are eliminating those variables/excuses one at a time. Using what amounts to the shooters version of the 'Scientifiic Method" which is hypothesize, experiment/test, analyze data and try the next thing.

Nothing is more satisfying than a single hole made with a rifle you built (or designed/spec'd for those without lathes) and a round you loaded. In conditions that you mastered. It's why shooting is such an utterly demanding cerebral sport... if not the most physical.

Hope this helps... I am sure I am forgetting something I wanted to mention. But this is getting into TLDR territory. So I'll just stop for now.

Cheers,

Sirhr
 
It doesn't make sense because in your quite limited example 100fps doesn't make much diffrence in your opnion. In the context of PB zeros, speed makes it longer so I have to disagree. Also the context of the conversation when the comment was made, was that less speed is an advantage. The pont was there are times where more speed is an advantage also.


Sure people go to a bigger cartridge all the time to increase PB zero, they also shoot a lighter bullet. 22lr to 17hmr. It's the reason I suggest a 22-250 when someone wants a coyote rifle. And it's the reason i steer them toward 40-55g bullets.
You are correct. Want more speed, go to a lighter bullet, and that can be done without loading to max pressure.

However, the typical difference between a moderate load and a max pressure load is roughly 100 to 150 fps. That’s the point. That is why I used the difference of 100 fps.

We are talking pressure, not bullet weight. To many people try to make a cartridge something it isn’t. And that’s the issue. Obviously going to a lighter bullet to get more speed works. But its pressure, not bullet weight is the point of the discussion.
 
You are correct. Want more speed, go to a lighter bullet, and that can be done without loading to max pressure.

However, the typical difference between a moderate load and a max pressure load is roughly 100 to 150 fps. That’s the point. That is why I used the difference of 100 fps.

We are talking pressure, not bullet weight. To many people try to make a cartridge something it isn’t. And that’s the issue. Obviously going to a lighter bullet to get more speed works. But its pressure, not bullet weight is the point of the discussion.
I think "we" were talking about one thing. Just like i explained. And You were talking about something else.
 
I am gonna put some of yall into apoplexy.
These two loads are from a 20" 308 win at 150 yards today.
#1- 178 ELD, Alpha SRP brass, cci 450 and Varget. Average 2816fps.

The left hand hole is the cold bore (literally) since there is a 22 degree difference from where the rifle/ammo is to the outside where I shoot.
20250821_143046.jpg


#2- 178 ELD, Alpha srp brass, cci 450 and Power Pro 2000MR. Average 2749fps.
20250821_143049.jpg


These pieces of brass have 12 firings on them. All over book max. Still running strong. Annealed after every firing.
 
Another consideration is bullet upset. Not necessary in target games, but more important in Hunting situations. I know of several mono metal manufacturers that recommend keeping impact velocity above 1700 - 1800 fps. If you are wanting that bullet to perform correctly at a given distance, it will need to be moving pretty fast at the muzzle.

This example would need a significant velocity boost to be effective beyond 350yds. With the previously stated upset velocity.
View attachment 8751060
To expand on the discussion, this was with my 223 running FGGM,55g bullet. if I’m wanting to shoot farther and have bullet upset, I’ll use the 22-250 with the same bullet.
 
I am gonna put some of yall into apoplexy.
These two loads are from a 20" 308 win at 150 yards today.
#1- 178 ELD, Alpha SRP brass, cci 450 and Varget. Average 2816fps.

The left hand hole is the cold bore (literally) since there is a 22 degree difference from where the rifle/ammo is to the outside where I shoot.
View attachment 8751749

#2- 178 ELD, Alpha srp brass, cci 450 and Power Pro 2000MR. Average 2749fps.
View attachment 8751742

These pieces of brass have 12 firings on them. All over book max. Still running strong. Annealed after every firing.
Is the POI that diffrent between the two loads?

I would be interested to see the actual pressure on the varget load. 😳😳 Mine will ejector mark lapau at 43g with the 178 a max at about 2700 in a 23".

I hardly mess with my 308. I need to rebarrel it to a good caliber. It's just not worth 44g of powder to lob potatoes. 🤣🤣🤣
 
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Is the POI that diffrent between the two loads?

I would be interested to see the actual pressure on the varget load. 😳😳 Mine will ejector mark lapau at 43g with the 178 a max at about 2700 in a 23".

I hardly mess with my 308. I need to rebarrel it to a good caliber. It's just not worth 44g of powder to lob potatoes. 🤣🤣🤣
Yes the two powder have different POI mostly due to the speed difference