I am working up the most accurate load I can find for my K-38 with hard cast 148 gr wadcutters from my lyman mould. While my best load of 3.0 gr Bullseye is very accurate, I was tooling with trying to find an equally accurate load with Unique. The odd thing about my 4.0 gr load of unique is that it is extreemly accurate, perhaps a bit better than my Bullseye load, but the extreeme spread for five shot strings is huge- about 100 f/s - but the load was very accurate over multiple five shot groups (at 25 yd rapid fire B8 target) - enough to be stitistically confident that this is no fluke.
Questions;
1. Do you ignore the ES at such a short distance if you're getting great accuracy or do you continue your load development because sooner or later it will bite you?
2. I was thinking of eliminating the crimp and seeing if the ES drops- thinking perhaps that with such a low charge, even slight variations in crimp (perhaps due to very slight variations in case length) are the cause. With such light loads, I doubt that the bullets will move. Unfortunately, I also crimp my Bullseye loads and they do not show the same ES (10-12 f/s) so this is not likely the cause of the high ES.
I am fine just bagging the Unique and sticking with the Bullseye load but I wanted some input on the concern folks have for ES and whether anyone has honestly developed a good 38 load with the 148 gr WC and Unique, and is it common to see large ES numbers with Unique when your charge is quite a bit below this powder's sweet spot.
Throughout all of this testing, I do not alter bullets, alloy, sizing diameter, primer, case, case prep process.
3. Are there any published guides out there, specifically for Bullseye shooters and their 38's, for NRA Bullseye event target loads with the popular bullets. If it contained loading advice for the 22 and 45 as well, even better.
Thanks fokls,
Ed