Two questions for those who are experienced with performing OCW test:
I always wondered why so many shooters load so close to or above max, then I read the OBT Paper:
"Any systematic effect that varies the chamber pressure or volume during the initial stages can dramatically change the pressure peak time. If a load is not very heavy and the case is not very full, the initial stages last longer than in a load that is near max. All the OCW loads developed with this theory have been found to work best when the powder charge is near max volume for the case and bullet combination. This also explains why variations in neck tension and seating depth can have an (sometimes) adverse affect on accuracy and velocity variations. Granted, this is not at all new, but now there is a consistent explanation for why this is so."
When you start your increments, do you even bother with the lower end? EG: 123 Scens and 4350, min 40 max 44.8. Start at 43 and go to 45 in .5 increments?
Reading the OCW , I raised an eyebrow at step 10 in the instructions:
"10. Your barrel should of course be clean before starting. Depending on the number of rounds you will fire, you may decide that it is necessary to clean half way through the string, fire a couple foulers, and allow a couple of minutes to cool before continuing. With custom barrels, you may be able to fire 25 shots or more before fouling begins spoiling group sizes. With factory barrels, I wouldn't fire more than 15 to 18 shots before cleaning... This is all relative, of course."
I was wondering fouling after 25 rounds is really a factor? @ 100 yards?
I wasn't planning on cleaning since my barrel has 'only' 50 rounds since the last cleaning. Now I'm not so sure.
I always wondered why so many shooters load so close to or above max, then I read the OBT Paper:
"Any systematic effect that varies the chamber pressure or volume during the initial stages can dramatically change the pressure peak time. If a load is not very heavy and the case is not very full, the initial stages last longer than in a load that is near max. All the OCW loads developed with this theory have been found to work best when the powder charge is near max volume for the case and bullet combination. This also explains why variations in neck tension and seating depth can have an (sometimes) adverse affect on accuracy and velocity variations. Granted, this is not at all new, but now there is a consistent explanation for why this is so."
Reading the OCW , I raised an eyebrow at step 10 in the instructions:
"10. Your barrel should of course be clean before starting. Depending on the number of rounds you will fire, you may decide that it is necessary to clean half way through the string, fire a couple foulers, and allow a couple of minutes to cool before continuing. With custom barrels, you may be able to fire 25 shots or more before fouling begins spoiling group sizes. With factory barrels, I wouldn't fire more than 15 to 18 shots before cleaning... This is all relative, of course."
I wasn't planning on cleaning since my barrel has 'only' 50 rounds since the last cleaning. Now I'm not so sure.