Jim D

Rick in Oregon wrote:Jim, this subject can be mind boggeling with all the various component combinations, not to mention quite expensive.
For me, I pick the bullet I want to use in a given rifle for the intended purpose, assuming it is correct for the twist in question. Then after some reading/research, pick two or three powders in the correct burn range that seem to be a consensus among other users and legitimized in the manuals. I start my loads in the mid-range of book loads and go from there. One trip to the range with my chronograph is usually all it takes to decide which powder to pursue with new/different loads with that given bullet. I then tweak the powder charge to find that node the rifle likes, then play with seating depth to find that sweet spot. Three or four range trips usually are all it takes for any given rifle to find it's Pet Load.
This also assumes all brass has been properly prepped; neck turned if needed, trimmed, primer pocket uniformed, flash hole deburred if warranted.
My two given primers for my small calibers are the Rem 7-1/2 and the Fed 205M, so depending on how many of each I have on hand, that settles the primer choice, although some folks spend an inordinate amount of time and money playing with different primers. I've never felt it's worth the effort by the tests I've done in that regard. Any change there seems to be extremely small, if any.
Once the rifle is shooting bugholes, I settle on a given load, then load up a seasons worth of ammo for rat and chuck shooting. With one load to work with, it doesn't take long to "learn" the rifle and that load in the field. With only one load to work with, consistency is the name of the game, and rodents are flying.......literally.![]()
This method has worked for me since 1968. There may be better, more expedient methods, but this is what has worked for me for quite a spell.
They were the Nosler 55 grain BT ballistic tips.jpx2rk wrote:I've read that FB bullets are more accurate at shorter ranges than BT's, which were you shooting?
That's exactly right. I gave these a shot to supplement the 35gr Berger since they're more readily available. There were some good groups but they weren't consistent enough for my liking. I've never tried the Varmageddon bullets with the "ballistic tip" because they too are not readily available. The Nosler 32grain boat tail ballistic-tip boat tails shoot lights out for me in my 20VT.broper wrote:Don't get disappointed yet. That 32 gr. Varmageddon was the most accurate in my 700 Rem. VLS. Shot a.169 group with BLC(2). Every gun is different. Keep testing to find the best load in your gun, it may not be anything like anybody else's. Have fun and good luck.
Jim, some time back I did an informal test using my 2VT and both the 32gr NBT and their 32gr Varmageddon (NVG) over the same load of RL-7 for an accuracy comparison. I was pleasantly surprised at the results.Jim White wrote:I've never tried the Varmageddon bullets with the "ballistic tip" because they too are not readily available. The Nosler 32grain boat tail ballistic-tip boat tails shoot lights out for me in my 20VT.HTH,