tinsellclark
Active Member
I couldn’t improve on the factory Hornady in mine 5 shot 0.18 group was mind blown
That's cheap for a dozen deer!![]()
Take a look at Alliant RL-16 nun-hunter, assuming it is available where you are. It is REACH compliant.
RL-16 is delivering outstanding accuracy and velocity for a growing number of Creedmoor shooters here, with very low ES numbers. It is so successful it is getting very hard to find the powder now.
For example my one buddy’s 20” Rem 700 custom job is giving a reliable 2900fps and tiny little groups. He was up around 3000fps before he chopped the barrel from 24”.
I haven’t bothered switching from H4350 because the gains from 2800 to 2900 aren’t worth the whole load development process but if I was starting again with a new rifle I wouldn’t hesitate to select RL-16.
Is that with 143s? If so that's over pressure surely?
Its with Lapua Scenars 139gr and Peterson brass.
The small primer brass changes the limits markedly as per Laurie.
This is not an exaggeration or a silly pressure-warnings-ignored exercise, far from it. The guy in our little community who first went down the RL-16 path is what I would regard as a very careful, highly experienced reloader (and expert rifle builder and wild catter). It has subsequently been repeated by another guy with a Howa like mine, same brass, and the same bullet.
Sorry, I should add that in the case of the custom Rem 700, the chamber had a small touch up with the reamber to allow for a small increase in COAL. In the case of the Howa, the COAL is 0.010” off the lands (IIRC) and the owner is single round loading as they are too long for the internal mag. He has a project is underway to increase the Howa Creedmoor max COAL using a long action detachable mag kit and the removal of some action material, I am not too up to speed on the details.
Barrel length? (Edit, just remembered 24" on original post)
That goes some way to explaining it but even with the SR primer brass and loner COAL he is getting 200 fps more than what alliant deem safe out of a 24" barrel, thats a lot! There was a guy on UKV shouting about how he'd got 3000 fps+ (can't recall the exact figure) out of his creedmoor with a 140, no pressure signs etc. probably SRP brass, experienced reloader etc. etc. Refused to put his load data on there until he had pressure checked the load, it got as far as him submitting rounds for pressure testing to the proof house it then it all went quiet, not a peep. My guess is he was over pressure.
It doesn't matter how experienced a reloader is unless they have pressure testing equipment they can't know 100% they are not exceeding the pressure the cartridge is designed for, Laurie has also written plenty of times that SRP palma type brass can mask pressure signs even if you are over pressure.
For comparison I am getting 2820 fps out of a howa with 'high energy reloader' 17 in SR primer lapua brass loaded to saami length, any faster I get marked pressure signs.
It's all good 25 Sharps.
After very carefully modelling the final load with all the correct dimensions, case capacity, etc etc in Quickload, the peak pressure outcome is ~3.5% less than SAAMI max. The velocity isn't quite there, not far off, well within what I've experienced with Quickload and some of its estimates in the past (particularly with ADI / Hodgdon powders).
Also, the Alliant website doesn't give minimum or maximum loads like the rest, just the one. There's the normal disclaimer at the front about not exceeding it, start at 10% lower. I thought that was very interesting. But their published load is quite close velocity wise to what has been achieved with a longer COAL, slightly more powder, and a shorter barrel (albeit a well run in, very good quality one). Every rifle, powder, case and bullet combination will yield different results. For example, the 143gr ELD-X in the Lapua SR case was a bit of a disaster in this same rifle, with very clear pressure signs much earlier than I have experienced in my Howa with the exact same combination.
At the end of the day, the outcome is what it is. I trust this bloke's approach, his experience, and for what its worth, the configuration of the custom rifle is such that he is the absolute last bloke on the planet who would ever want to experience an over-pressure failure... Maybe a case of 'don't do this at home' for the regular bloke, but to be honest all my mate has done is follow the established path of working up to find pressure, and backing off.
EDIT! Just had a touchup from my mate who has reminded me that it wasn’t the 139gr Scenar, it was the discontinued (?) 136gr Scenar, and the 130gr TMK that he settled on. Very similar velocities.
Point well made and accepted, sorry, shan’t do it again.
(However, with the caveat that of course the subject of book max loads is another book in its own right!)