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Quote from: JDArms1240 on January 13, 2026, 08:36:09 AMNice, thanks folks! This is the info I’m looking for. I have a spot that stretches to about 1100 yards, but my scope won’t go that far. The furthest I can go is 925 before the turret tops out. Real fun to shoot that far but I’m not too worried about the scope since I won’t be shooting an animal that far.The chronograph is on my list of things to get, so I guess a trimmer isn’t the last item I need to get. For now I have used someone else’s chrono.IMO 300-500 is plenty. You don't want to stretch it so far that your equipment is being tested vs the rounds. I'll add that keeping track of which impact is which gets more difficult the further the target.
Nice, thanks folks! This is the info I’m looking for. I have a spot that stretches to about 1100 yards, but my scope won’t go that far. The furthest I can go is 925 before the turret tops out. Real fun to shoot that far but I’m not too worried about the scope since I won’t be shooting an animal that far.The chronograph is on my list of things to get, so I guess a trimmer isn’t the last item I need to get. For now I have used someone else’s chrono.
Lots of ways to skin this cat….and all work. I don’t like to waste powder or components so I do it this way…1. Start at a safe powder charge and a seating depth of 0.020 off the lands. 2. Work up 0.5 grains of powder for each subsequent round. 3. Shoot these rounds, allowing your barrel to cool between shots (or at least after ever 2-3 shots). I prefer 2-3 minutes between shots depending on ambient temperature. 4.after each shot, look for pressure signs on your brass. If you see pressure signs…..stop immediately and know that is your max load. (Pressure signs include flattened primers, heavy bolt lift, ejector or extractor marks, blown primers, primer dimpling, etc.) 5. Watch your target for trends in POI. Document every shots location. 6. Hopefully you can chronograph each round to track velocities. 7. Find a node with the velocities or the POI trends and pick your starting load. 8. Now you can load 3-5 rounds and shoot for group. You can fine tune your groups in 0.2 grains of powder increments and with seating depths working away from the lands (jam) in 0.002 or 0.003 increments. Don’t hesitate to ask for clarification. I typed this on my phone so I tried not to be to wordy.
How full is your case at 70.5? Are you compressing the load or do you still have room. If there is no pressure I would work up carefully looking for pressure…..assuming I’m not compressing the powder. I like 90% + case fill with my loads. I’m not against slight compression but I try to avoid it. If your case is full and you have not hit pressure and are not getting the velocities you should….i would think a faster powder is needed. Lots of unknown on my part, so these are just general rules or thoughts.