Loading for a 7-30Waters 14" Contender barrel from Virgin Valley Custom Guns.
Have tried several loads looking for consistent velocities and am struggling to make a judgement.
1. With Win 748, CCI 350 mag primers and a 120 gr NBT I get 125-150 fps max variation from slowest to fastest shot [2150 to 2300 fps]
2. With Varget and a BR primer I am getting 100 fps slowest to fastest...but I got a number of rounds clustered a bit closer together and then a slower round.
Questions...What is considered a reasonable spread in terms of %? Anyone here have the experience that a barrel might take a few rounds to settle down in velocity immediate after a cleaning? Any suggestions for improving shot to shot variation.
Notes: I am full length resizing, weighing every charge, seating a 120 grain NBT to within 0.020 of the rifling.
Thanks for your help.
rimfire
You probably wont be happy with my answer, but you asked. Im not sure I can make any suggestions to help you, but Ill try.
First, the spread. My .45-70 loads consistently provide 4- and 5-shot shot strings with 7fps Standard Deviation or better, and as low as 1.7fps. Extreme Spreads are consistently at or under 8fps. Not always, but mostly. My .300 Win Mag often yields 4-shot strings with Standard Deviations under 7fps and Extreme Spreads around 15fps.My buddy shot a 4-shot string in his Marlin .30-30 and had a 4fps Extreme Spread. So thats what things look like when they are going well. In general, I prefer a Standard Deviation under 10fps and an Extreme Spread under 20fps. Doesnt always work out, though.
If I was getting Extreme Spreads of 125-150fps I would stop and question everything starting with the batteries in the chronograph, the chronograph itself, and the loads and the manner in which they were prepared.
A few thoughts come to mind. First, after cleaning you should ALWAYS fire some fouling shots before shooting for the record. Shooting a bullet down an oily or even a sparkly clean bore will yield different results than when the bore is fouled. Second, you dont mention how you are crimping, but inconsistent crimps could be part of the problem. The solution is to trim all the cases to a uniform length. That way you get consistent crimps whether using roll crimps or the Lee Factory Crimp Die. Another thought that comes to mind is the condition of your brass is it all one manufacturer, how much variation is there in weight, how many times has it been fired? Using different vendor brass will exacerbate the problem, as will extreme differences in weight even if it has the same headstamp (vendor). If the some of the brass has been work hardened by too many firings you may be getting inconsistent neck tension. in which case its time to anneal or replace the brass. Also, case necks that are too thick can cause problems.
A short while back I was getting some really strange results with the chrono. In the past strange results were due to a low battery but this time it was due to a broken wire.
Dont know it this will help, hope it does.
Good luck.