Hi Guys,
Need your advice again.
For a newer shooter/reloader shooting up to 600 yards using a heavy barrel/gun and a muzzle brake
Assuming all the bullets stays supersonic to the target and the barrel likes 168, 175, 180 and 190 equally well - would using 190 gr bullets make things "easier" for a new shooter/reloader?
By easier, I mean 190 grain won't be as sensitive to wind or if the powder weight is slightly off
The trade off is more recoil but weight of gun and muzzle brake should help mitigate it. And a few cents more per bullet
My friend will be testing 168 and 175. I'm thinking of testing 180 and 190.
Tnx!
(Why use 308 for just 600 yards? I bought it for 1000 yards and found out afterwards that civilians aren't allowed on the 700-1000 yard range at Puuloa.)
tim, going back to your original question--
as you correctly pointed out, the choice to use 155, 168, 175/178, 180, 190, and even the bullets above 200, are largely dependent on the yardage at which the bullet goes transonic.
like you, i'm also learning about bullet choice and ballistic coefficient. typically the long range shooters will prefer high ballistic coefficient bullets because they hold their supersonic velocities out to longer ranges, and are also less sensitive to wind drift.
regarding your Q about sensitivity to powder weight variations, this will be largely dependent on the charge weight you choose. a lot of the newer reloading theories that i've been reading into have to do with choosing a charge weight that provides very little variation in velocity for charges +/- 0.1gr or +/- 0.2gr. basically, you want a charge weight in the "flat spot" on a velocity graph. ideally, that charge weight will also have a low standard deviation and low extreme spread in velocities.
I'm actually playing with 168, 175, and 190 loadings right now. i'm attaching a pic of the velocity data from a recent session to show you the "flat spot" that i'm referring to for a 175gr Nosler OTM and Varget test.
i'm still in the process of learning about this so take my post with a grain of salt.
