What a difference a grain makes
#1
Nontypical Buck
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What a difference a grain makes
100 yards, Barnes Origonal 300g .458, Crushed Rib sabot .452, 64g of IMR 4198 Federal primer from a Savage 10ML.
About 60 degrees. Load and shoot, no waiting between shots. No cleaning between shot. Laid out 5 viles of powder, 5 primers, 5 CR sabots and 5Barnes 300g. TC SW Loading jag with XS Power Rod, short starter, with plastic Dead Center bullet starter.
5 shot groups. Here is the 64g Picture. Chap
About 60 degrees. Load and shoot, no waiting between shots. No cleaning between shot. Laid out 5 viles of powder, 5 primers, 5 CR sabots and 5Barnes 300g. TC SW Loading jag with XS Power Rod, short starter, with plastic Dead Center bullet starter.
5 shot groups. Here is the 64g Picture. Chap
#3
Nontypical Buck
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RE: What a difference a grain makes
Here is the 66g picture.
Everything the same, same sabot, same bullet, same primer, same loading procedure, same pressure applied to loading. CR very hard to get down the bore but not impossible. Hard to seat. I have had trouble with misfires with 4198 last year with Parker Ballistic extremes and the supplied Parker sabot, no ignition. Not enough back pressure to get ignition. No problem with the Barnes Origonals and the CR sabot. 4198 is much more kick that 5744, folks on the Savage forum report Barnes Origonals at 65g going 2350 fps. 5744 is about 2000 fps MV. I like the 4198 at 66 g, will write that down in my book.
Will also try 67g, 68g and 69g of 4198. One fellow on Savage forum shoots at 70 and says it is not bad. I only shot 20 shots today with a lead sled with 10 lbs of sand on it, and I had enough.
Chap
Everything the same, same sabot, same bullet, same primer, same loading procedure, same pressure applied to loading. CR very hard to get down the bore but not impossible. Hard to seat. I have had trouble with misfires with 4198 last year with Parker Ballistic extremes and the supplied Parker sabot, no ignition. Not enough back pressure to get ignition. No problem with the Barnes Origonals and the CR sabot. 4198 is much more kick that 5744, folks on the Savage forum report Barnes Origonals at 65g going 2350 fps. 5744 is about 2000 fps MV. I like the 4198 at 66 g, will write that down in my book.
Will also try 67g, 68g and 69g of 4198. One fellow on Savage forum shoots at 70 and says it is not bad. I only shot 20 shots today with a lead sled with 10 lbs of sand on it, and I had enough.
Chap
#4
RE: What a difference a grain makes
WOW!! that is some good shooting.. amazing what a difference a little makes in a smokeless powder rifle... That would be some nasty loads with that kind of velocity to them.
I was reading on a different forum. Some of them wait as much as ten minutes between shots with their Savage. Yet your's does not seem that fussy. I wonder why some feel it necessary. Does it make a big difference in accuracy just waiting those minutes?
I was reading on a different forum. Some of them wait as much as ten minutes between shots with their Savage. Yet your's does not seem that fussy. I wonder why some feel it necessary. Does it make a big difference in accuracy just waiting those minutes?
#5
Nontypical Buck
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RE: What a difference a grain makes
Here is the other bullet I shot again today, 100 yards, Barnes Flat Nose TSX 300g hollow point, part # 45843, CR sabot, 44g of AA 5744, Federal 209a primer. These were the first 5 shots I shot today. Same procedure as above, just different powder and bullet. I like this bullet. I like the looks of it, very large hollow point, all copper, LONG, same as the MZ only a rifle bullet, I like the accuracy. I think thismaybe my whitetail bullet with the CR sabot, just move my sight over 1.5 inch and up 1.5".
Chap
Chap
#6
Nontypical Buck
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RE: What a difference a grain makes
ORIGINAL: cayugad
WOW!! that is some good shooting.. amazing what a difference a little makes in a smokeless powder rifle... That would be some nasty loads with that kind of velocity to them.
I was reading on a different forum. Some of them wait as much as ten minutes between shots with their Savage. Yet your's does not seem that fussy. I wonder why some feel it necessary. Does it make a big difference in accuracy just waiting those minutes?
WOW!! that is some good shooting.. amazing what a difference a little makes in a smokeless powder rifle... That would be some nasty loads with that kind of velocity to them.
I was reading on a different forum. Some of them wait as much as ten minutes between shots with their Savage. Yet your's does not seem that fussy. I wonder why some feel it necessary. Does it make a big difference in accuracy just waiting those minutes?
5 primers
5 sabots
5 bullets
5 viles of powder.
Once the barrel gets warm, the heat from the barrel softens the sabot, causing less of a gas check, causing less accuracy.
It was sunny out today. I hid my sabots below a glove not letting get warmed up. If you don't the get very warm and are very plyable, again causing accuracy loss. Shooting the Savage is exactly like hand loading and 1 g makes a heck of a difference, at least with 4198 it does. A lot of guys over on the Savage forum shoot, chase accuracy, so they wait 10 and 15 minutes between shots. I don't I am not that big an accuracy nut, I think it cost me 1/2 inch at most. I will take the 65g group any day and the group I shot with the TSX any day for hunting. I like accuracy, but I am not going to wait 15 just to get it, life is too shot. These are accurate rifles with the right sabot, but they are also very inaccurate with the wrong combo. So 1g makes a heck of a difference in this rifle, with Smokeless. I suspect 1g will not make that much difference with 777, but I have never tied it. Last time I was finding sabot fit with the Barnes Origonals, now I finding "what grain of powder" for 4198, since I have the right tight sabot fit. It is very much a science with the Savage, tight sabot, tight loading pressure, 300g bullet, just the right grains of powder, hot primer (Win or Fed) and you have a winning combo. Loose sabot, no fire or it will fire with 5744, but not with 4198. Not compressed, sometimes misfires with 5744, will definitely not fire with 4198. Very tight sabots are the norm in the Savage.
Chap
#7
RE: What a difference a grain makes
Chap thanks for sharing. I was looking at .458 barnes myself and with a good supply of CR sabots/h4198 I may just have to give them a go. As you have seen 4198 has potential with the 300gr buts requires you to search for the right pressure to find it's sweet spot. You maybe able to shrink those groups my bumping up a tad, my rifle liked 68-69gr under 300grs. The recoil will be up though, when developing I actually didn't notice the push but once I started fine tuning and shooting it a lot my sweet spot of 68-69grs started to beocme more noticable. That was with the terrible tupperware stock though, the laminate is easier on the shoulder from a to z IME. We'll see how the newstock translates recoil...if i ever get it!!![:@]
I totally agree with your feelings about chasing accuracy, had my fillplus my time right now is short in supply.I amsuffering from Savage burn out actually. Misfire's I have had were with powders 4227 and RL7 (dirtypowder and didn't realize howmuch carbon build up was in the vent). Primer CCI mag 209s had half a dozen that neverstarted the fire, all I needed to toss them in the dumpster.So far nomisfire's from bullet/sabot or compression of load.
I totally agree with your feelings about chasing accuracy, had my fillplus my time right now is short in supply.I amsuffering from Savage burn out actually. Misfire's I have had were with powders 4227 and RL7 (dirtypowder and didn't realize howmuch carbon build up was in the vent). Primer CCI mag 209s had half a dozen that neverstarted the fire, all I needed to toss them in the dumpster.So far nomisfire's from bullet/sabot or compression of load.
#9
Nontypical Buck
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RE: What a difference a grain makes
ORIGINAL: skeeter 7MM
Chap thanks for sharing. I was looking at .458 barnes myself and with a good supply of CR sabots/h4198 I may just have to give them a go. As you have seen 4198 has potential with the 300gr buts requires you to search for the right pressure to find it's sweet spot. You maybe able to shrink those groups my bumping up a tad, my rifle liked 68-69gr under 300grs. The recoil will be up though, when developing I actually didn't notice the push but once I started fine tuning and shooting it a lot my sweet spot of 68-69grs started to beocme more noticable. That was with the terrible tupperware stock though, the laminate is easier on the shoulder from a to z IME. We'll see how the newstock translates recoil...if i ever get it!!![:@]
I totally agree with your feelings about chasing accuracy, had my fillplus my time right now is short in supply.I amsuffering from Savage burn out actually. Misfire's I have had were with powders 4227 and RL7 (dirtypowder and didn't realize howmuch carbon build up was in the vent). Primer CCI mag 209s had half a dozen that neverstarted the fire, all I needed to toss them in the dumpster.So far nomisfire's from bullet/sabot or compression of load.
Chap thanks for sharing. I was looking at .458 barnes myself and with a good supply of CR sabots/h4198 I may just have to give them a go. As you have seen 4198 has potential with the 300gr buts requires you to search for the right pressure to find it's sweet spot. You maybe able to shrink those groups my bumping up a tad, my rifle liked 68-69gr under 300grs. The recoil will be up though, when developing I actually didn't notice the push but once I started fine tuning and shooting it a lot my sweet spot of 68-69grs started to beocme more noticable. That was with the terrible tupperware stock though, the laminate is easier on the shoulder from a to z IME. We'll see how the newstock translates recoil...if i ever get it!!![:@]
I totally agree with your feelings about chasing accuracy, had my fillplus my time right now is short in supply.I amsuffering from Savage burn out actually. Misfire's I have had were with powders 4227 and RL7 (dirtypowder and didn't realize howmuch carbon build up was in the vent). Primer CCI mag 209s had half a dozen that neverstarted the fire, all I needed to toss them in the dumpster.So far nomisfire's from bullet/sabot or compression of load.
I need to drill out my breech plug, since I shot 20 times today. I find about 25-30 times is all I dare to go with it, once the hole gets really really small, I don't get reliable ignition. All in all I like he .458 bullets mated with the CR .452 sabot, sees to work good in a Savage. I predict that it will also work great in Blackhorn, since this is close to a smokeless powder in both design and fouling that it leaves in the bore. Chap