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Author Topic: 308 reloading  (Read 2416 times)

Offline ckr

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308 reloading
« on: October 29, 2015, 07:31:27 PM »
Good evening gents.  I am wondering if anyone out there has and experience using IMR 8208xbr in conjunction with 125gr nosler ballistic tips.  I am starting to develop a load for kids running a ruger compact.  I was hopeing be be around 2500-2600fps.  Any help would be great.  I have been looking all around and I can't find any info for the 125gr bt

Thanks


Offline hollymaster

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #1 on: October 29, 2015, 08:01:58 PM »
I've found lighter bullets don't stabilize well. Anything under 150gr gets squirrely.  :twocents:

Offline ckr

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #2 on: October 29, 2015, 08:11:41 PM »
Using which powders?  I have been told 4895 is very accurate with the 125bt.  The problem is that I have 2lbs of 8208 and want to use them up.  I do have a 150 load that shoots good with the 8208 going 2300fps.  I was thinking by going to a lighter bullet, the recoil would be even less even at a greater speed

Offline AWS

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #3 on: October 30, 2015, 09:47:49 AM »
Here's what you need.

http://www.hodgdonreloading.com/data/rifle

Just follow the prompts.

Asking for load data on the internet is not the safest thing to do, a miss key stoke or or just bad memory can cause a serious accident.  Always look for a published load, at least it gives you a starting point, not just a guess if it will work.
« Last Edit: October 30, 2015, 09:54:49 AM by AWS »
After the first shot the rest are just noise.

Make mine a Minaska

Offline Bill W

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #4 on: October 30, 2015, 10:02:39 AM »
I don't think there would be much difference in felt recoil by any more than a pound or two.

Offline ckr

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #5 on: October 30, 2015, 12:44:43 PM »
Thanks for the input.  I have looked at the hodgdon site and they have the starting load at 2800 and change.  I think I saw some reduced loads in the hornady book using 125s with the 8208 powder but I have missed place my book.  Does anyone have it to look up the info?

Offline yorketransport

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #6 on: October 31, 2015, 09:26:20 AM »
This is from Hornady #9


It's not the 125 NBT, but to get the velocity you want you're going to be sitting at the starting charge anyways.

Andrew

Offline 300rum

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #7 on: October 31, 2015, 09:53:13 AM »
You need to know your twist rate.  Most hunting style rifles in .308 are built to stabilize a 150gr bullet and more then likely you will be better served to stick with a 150gr bullet.  Your rifle might stabilize a 125gr bullet just fine but you will need to try it out first.  The recoil difference won't be enough to bother with.   

 

Offline yorketransport

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #8 on: October 31, 2015, 10:13:23 AM »
You need to know your twist rate.  Most hunting style rifles in .308 are built to stabilize a 150gr bullet and more then likely you will be better served to stick with a 150gr bullet.  Your rifle might stabilize a 125gr bullet just fine but you will need to try it out first.  The recoil difference won't be enough to bother with.   

 

Any factory 308 will stabilize a 125gr bullet. The 308 isn't capable of enough velocity to over spin a 125gr bullet (or any bullet for that matter!) to the point of having significant accuracy issues. Ruger uses a pretty standard 1-10" twist on all of it's .30 caliber rifles which will stabilize any bullet up to about 200 grains in a 308.  If I were building a 308 specifically to shoot 125/130gr bullets I might go with a different twist but I doubt that you'd see any real difference.

Andrew

Offline ckr

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Re: 308 reloading
« Reply #9 on: October 31, 2015, 01:35:55 PM »
Thanks York for the picture.  It's the info I was looking for

 


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