Have always wondered on this , most srguements ar in rifle length barrels.
I have the loadbook on the tc contender and in the 30-30 section it has these max loads
in the sierra bullet section
gn bbl in inches powder gns vel
110 10 imr 4198 29.6 2200
110 14 imr 4198 29 2300
Why would the 10 inch barrel use .9 gns more powder and get less velocity, And why do they list the max charge on the 14 as less, this is from the sierra test labs so I would assume the data is correct
also in the hornady info the barrels used to test were 10 inch their statement is this " uniformity from shot to shot is necessary for accuracy ... uniformaty was never obtainable .. the case capacity vs barrel length the 30-30 case is designed to perform in a rifle length , ... to much powder is left unburned which contributes to
poor accuracy. " They go on to explain when slower powders are used to burn better poor load density results.
Now it seems to me that the powder companies say the powder needs at least some room to burn, and 10 inches is not enough
Also in the manuel the .222 is listed the same way 10 inches is to little to burn the charge, I contend that not all the powder will be burned in a short barrel , and if all powder could be burned in shorter distances we could do with less variation in powder burn rates.
On my own loading experiments I have noticed this , in my 14 inch contender in .222 rem. I can use the max charge listed in the manual and the slower powders do seem to flash more, this is also true in the 30-30 16inch and the 45-70 14 inch barrel , I have used data from the 30 herret using filler to try and even out the shot to shot varience but with not much sucess.