Don,
After years of working with small case capacity 6.5mm cartridges for HP Silhouette I can say that one should NEVER use any double base powder; nitro-cellulous/nitroglycerine. These powders are very dangerous to use when loading to top cartridge pressures. It is the nitroglycerine that makes the powder VERY temperature sensitive with respect to pressure. The least temperature sensitive powders out there are the Hodgdon Extreme Series,
http://www.hodgdon.com/smokeless/extreme/page4.php. The only other powders I use for HP are the VVO N100 Series,
http://www.vihtavuori-lapua.com/rifle.asp#N100%20series.
The ball powders made by Winchester, all of the N500 series powders made by VVO, some of the RL powders and others that Im not aware of have nitroglycerine in them. They are to be avoided like the plague if one is loading to high chamber pressures as just an extra bit of ambient temperature can cause the catastrophic event that befell you at Phoenix. STAY AWAY FROM DOUBLE BASE POWDERS!!! As a matter of fact Id not recommend double-base powders for ANY application.
Now, if I was loading the Grendel for rams Id do 6 things to optimize ram performance:
1.Shoot a 139 Lapua Scenar as it has the best balance of BC and toughness or one of the heavy jacketed 140-grain Cauterucios with closed meplates.
2.Moly-coat the bullets as one can get about 40 fps more MV at the same chamber pressure with moly-coated bullets due to reduced peak pressure
3.Use VarGet powder for rams
4.Use Lapua brass as it will withstand higher pressures
5.Use Rem 7 ½ primers, they will add about 15 fps to the MV
6.Use an 8-twist barrel. Longer is NOT better as 24 will probably give the highest MVs for a particular load because the cartridge is under-bore by a large margin. The bullet actually starts to slow down in the barrel if it is too long when using an under-bore cartridge like the Grendel. In testing with the 6.5mm TKS, about 10% more case capacity than the Grendel) a 24 barrel gave higher MVs compared to a 26 barrel of about 20 fps for rams loads. Both barrels were made one right after the other by Hart. The recommendation is to use an 8-twist barrel with a # 5 or 5 1/2 contour with a finish length of 24. Coupled with a trued Remington 700 Short action, that would make a dandy HP Hunter bedded in one of the Pharr-out HP Hunter stocks.
If one follows the above, given the reamer was properly designed for the 140-grain class VLDs, not a trivial issue for silhouette, one should be able to launch the 139 Lapua Scenars to about 2,625 fps (maybe a bit more) with no excessive pressure. If any of you are interested in having a HP Hunter Grendel reamer ground contact me and I will help with the design.
Speaking of Hunter Class cartridges, a new version of the 7mm BR has been designed with reamer currently being made by JGS. It is a standard 7mm BR but with the front-end optimized for the 176-grain VLDs made by Cauterucio. With about 32 grains of VarGet and the 176 Cauterucio out of an 8-twist barrel that load will knock down rams like no 260 ever will. I personally know that the 176 C bullet launched at 2,325 fps out of my 7mm PPC Improved (5% less case capacity than the 7mmBR) is totally devastating on rams, much more so than a 139-grain 6.5mm Scenar launched at a MV of 2,800 fps. And, the recoil from the 176-grain, 7mm bullet launched at 2,325 fps is noticeably milder than the higher MV 139 Scenar. Projected loads for the 7mmBR / TPP (Theodore (reamer & load designer)/Pearson(master smith)/Perry(master trigger-puller) are:
CPT: 30 grains of VarGet under the 139 Hornady SST, MV 2,400 fps
Rams: 32 grains of VarGet under the 176 Cauterucio, MV 2,350 fps
More to come when the rifle is built by our one and only MetalHead, Marvelous Marvin Pearson, proprietor and head guru, or is that grunt, of Precision Target Sports, maker of world-class silhouette SB and HP rifles. For those interested in such a Hunter HP Silhouette rifle Marvelous will have access to the reamer, as rumor has it.