Hi,
Earlier in the year I had done OCW work to obtain a optimal load:
Stock 5R Rem w/PMII
Berger 175gr OTM
Lapua Brass, CCI BR primers
H4895
COAL @ mag length - a few hundredths
With some work, found a node around 42.8-43.0gr H4895. With the 175gr OTMs, I could probably slide the bullet out a little more, but I prefer mag feeding, so haven't messed with that. Most of the work was done in PA, and the last few sessions have been in the 20-30*F range. During the initial workups, I had stopped around 43.6gr because of light pressure signs. There may have been a few very light signs at 43.4, but light enough that I couldn't tell if it was just me.
So in preparation for not having to work today, I loaded 10 each of 42.8, 42.9, and 43.0 to see if I couldn't narrow that sweet spot down and increase consistency a bit...and when I hit the range (50*F and clear, in the Socialist Republic of Taxachusetts), I started seeing pressure signs almost immediately. They weren't consistent; an occasional light, one or two clear, but scattered throughout all 30.
This was firstly very frustrating, as this had been considerable time invested, second because the 42.9 came out good (ES ~20, SD 7, 10-shot group of .75"), and third because even though I know that no powder is truly temperature insensitive, I hadn't expected H4895 to be this reactive...and I thought I had more headroom.
Anyway, my question is: is this level of variability expected for this powder, or could it have been something else that I did?
Auxiliary question: I've borrowed a Dillon D-Terminator scale while I get my own, do you guys think they suck? Because I've tried everything with this one, and I don't think it would even work good as a boat anchor.
Thanks.
Earlier in the year I had done OCW work to obtain a optimal load:
Stock 5R Rem w/PMII
Berger 175gr OTM
Lapua Brass, CCI BR primers
H4895
COAL @ mag length - a few hundredths
With some work, found a node around 42.8-43.0gr H4895. With the 175gr OTMs, I could probably slide the bullet out a little more, but I prefer mag feeding, so haven't messed with that. Most of the work was done in PA, and the last few sessions have been in the 20-30*F range. During the initial workups, I had stopped around 43.6gr because of light pressure signs. There may have been a few very light signs at 43.4, but light enough that I couldn't tell if it was just me.
So in preparation for not having to work today, I loaded 10 each of 42.8, 42.9, and 43.0 to see if I couldn't narrow that sweet spot down and increase consistency a bit...and when I hit the range (50*F and clear, in the Socialist Republic of Taxachusetts), I started seeing pressure signs almost immediately. They weren't consistent; an occasional light, one or two clear, but scattered throughout all 30.
This was firstly very frustrating, as this had been considerable time invested, second because the 42.9 came out good (ES ~20, SD 7, 10-shot group of .75"), and third because even though I know that no powder is truly temperature insensitive, I hadn't expected H4895 to be this reactive...and I thought I had more headroom.
Anyway, my question is: is this level of variability expected for this powder, or could it have been something else that I did?
Auxiliary question: I've borrowed a Dillon D-Terminator scale while I get my own, do you guys think they suck? Because I've tried everything with this one, and I don't think it would even work good as a boat anchor.
Thanks.