Q
QuickNDirty
Guest
I developed a load in (.308 win) Winchester brass of which I have about 50. I have several hundred CBC brass cases which are more like military brass (crimped primer, heavier, etc).
The Winchester brass I water-weighed to an average of 56 grains.
The CBC brass water-weighed an average of 54 grains.
The load I like is 40.4 grains of N140 which is 1.6 grains below the maximum load (lyman 49th) for the bullets I want to shoot (180 grain SGK/SMK).
I haven't shot any reloads with the CBC brass, yet, but I think I found a crude way to gauge the performance, but it could be total BS.
Here it is: The 40.4 grains of powder in the Winchester brass sounds like 38.0 grains in the CBC brass when shaken next to the ear.
I have no idea if a comparison like that will be precise to any degree, but in other related fields, the shake comparison has worked well (fireworks, anyone? Fuller sound -> bigger bang, same sound; same bang)
All that aside, how much of a difference does 2 grains of capacity make? In other words, if 38 grains in one case does something, 38 grains in a smaller capacity case will do more based on what I understand about powder burn rates under compression, but approximately how much of a difference are we talking, all else being equal? I'd be happy if my 40.4 grain load only took 37.6 grains in a different type of case I have an abundance of =)
The Winchester brass I water-weighed to an average of 56 grains.
The CBC brass water-weighed an average of 54 grains.
The load I like is 40.4 grains of N140 which is 1.6 grains below the maximum load (lyman 49th) for the bullets I want to shoot (180 grain SGK/SMK).
I haven't shot any reloads with the CBC brass, yet, but I think I found a crude way to gauge the performance, but it could be total BS.
Here it is: The 40.4 grains of powder in the Winchester brass sounds like 38.0 grains in the CBC brass when shaken next to the ear.
I have no idea if a comparison like that will be precise to any degree, but in other related fields, the shake comparison has worked well (fireworks, anyone? Fuller sound -> bigger bang, same sound; same bang)
All that aside, how much of a difference does 2 grains of capacity make? In other words, if 38 grains in one case does something, 38 grains in a smaller capacity case will do more based on what I understand about powder burn rates under compression, but approximately how much of a difference are we talking, all else being equal? I'd be happy if my 40.4 grain load only took 37.6 grains in a different type of case I have an abundance of =)