My inline stops showing useful gains in velocity @135grs, and I shoot 130, its very accurate. If I take that same sabot and shoot 80 grs., its less accurate, because the sabot is designed for high pressure and doesnt fully obdurate with a lighter load. Im sure I could find a sabot that works real well @ 80grs, maybe even a tad better than my 130gr. load, I just like em going fast.
There are no absolutes, gun to gun of the same model, even the projectile and ignition choice changes the results. The diameter of the bullet or sabot combo will effect pressure and therefore the burn rate, bottom line will be a velocity difference and probably accuracy as well. Ive chronod many guns and loads, some will register gains right up to 150grs, other stop somewhere below that number. As far as accuracy goes, you can push any gun, even a center fire, too fast for the bullet/rifling combination and accuracy will suffer, nothing new here.
What I dont understand is what is wrong with unburnt powder, it may add to the fouling, I guess it may be a fire hazard in some situations, and then there is cost. I look down the bbl. Of my scattergun after a heavy day of shooting and there is unburnt red-dot in it. My colt 45 doesnt burn all of the 7.5grs. of unique I put in it, wonder how much of that Im wasting, wonder how much I should care. Want to test the effects of recoil, take a 100gr. load and shoot a few, then add 50grs of cream-o-wheat, shoot a few. Then do the same thing with 150grs. of powder, (or any wts. you choose). The wt of the powder adds very little to the recoil, the extra power adds quite a bit.
1860