Kimmeridgien
Active Member
Hi,
I am trying to understand (powder?) temperature dependence and how to compensate for it.
One of my rifles is a Sako 85 Hunter in 6,5x55SE with a new 62 cm Krieger 1:8" 5R barrel and muzzle break. I have been working up a load for Norma Bondstrike Extreme 143 grains with VV N550 powder, Norma brass and Federal 215 LR GM primers.
A few weeks ago I tried loads in 0.1 grain increments and had very nice and consistent (change of) group sizes. I had previously tested heavier loads and thought I was close to a node at a weight that produced just about the desired MV, so I shot these increments from higher to lower.
At 41.7 grains I had a 3-shot group size of 7.2 mm at 100 m, but I hadn't prepared 41.6 so I returned a few days later with 41.7 and 41.6 in the intention of seeing whether the group size would open up again at 41.6. To my surprise, 41.7 now performed like 41.9 had and 41.6 like the average of the previous 41.7 and 41.8 loads (about 12 mm).
On the day of the first load test I believe it was about 20 degrees C. The second time it was about 27 degrees C. The location is a 100 m above-ground tunnel, so there is no wind effect. The rifle and the cartridges are assumed to be of ambient temperature.
Assuming this is due to the difference in temperature, the question is how to proceed. Most of my hunting will be done at lower temperatures, perhaps 0 to 10 degrees C. Presumably this would require slightly heavier loads. I think that the larger group sizes and different PIO would still be acceptable for 50-150 m aim-at-the-lungs hunting, but not being on a node means a random effect on the individual bullet's PIO (plus the difference in bullet drop). It would make it unwise to attempt a head shot, even though the rifle itself can produce excellent groups and assuming the shooter is sufficiently good.
I have thought of the following options:
* Change to VV N555, which is believed to be less temperature-dependent and probably a better choice for a 143 grain bullet for my calibre than N550.
* Change to VV N150 or N160, as I have got the impression that single-base powders are often more temperature stable.
* Replace the muzzle break with a heavy suppressor, in the assumption that the added weight at the muzzle would make the rifle behave more like a varmint barrel. (My Tikka M65 Continental in the same calibre has wider nodes than the thin barrel of the Sako 85 Hunter, perhaps 0.2 - 0.3 grains wide.)
* Replace the muzzle break with a barrel tuner and adjust onto the node.
* Load up a few cartridges of each increment from 41.6 to perhaps 42.0 and select the most fitting based on the expected temperature of the individual hunt.
* Use the varmint-barreled rifle instead when hunting from a tower. It's 1 kg heavier and equipped with a long-range 5-25 target scope, so it's not a drop-in replacement for my light hunting rifle with a Zeiss Victory HT scope, particularly not at dawn and dusk.
First of all, am I on the right track and pondering appropriate alternatives?
What are your thoughts and experience on this topic?
Thank in advance,
Nic
I am trying to understand (powder?) temperature dependence and how to compensate for it.
One of my rifles is a Sako 85 Hunter in 6,5x55SE with a new 62 cm Krieger 1:8" 5R barrel and muzzle break. I have been working up a load for Norma Bondstrike Extreme 143 grains with VV N550 powder, Norma brass and Federal 215 LR GM primers.
A few weeks ago I tried loads in 0.1 grain increments and had very nice and consistent (change of) group sizes. I had previously tested heavier loads and thought I was close to a node at a weight that produced just about the desired MV, so I shot these increments from higher to lower.
At 41.7 grains I had a 3-shot group size of 7.2 mm at 100 m, but I hadn't prepared 41.6 so I returned a few days later with 41.7 and 41.6 in the intention of seeing whether the group size would open up again at 41.6. To my surprise, 41.7 now performed like 41.9 had and 41.6 like the average of the previous 41.7 and 41.8 loads (about 12 mm).
On the day of the first load test I believe it was about 20 degrees C. The second time it was about 27 degrees C. The location is a 100 m above-ground tunnel, so there is no wind effect. The rifle and the cartridges are assumed to be of ambient temperature.
Assuming this is due to the difference in temperature, the question is how to proceed. Most of my hunting will be done at lower temperatures, perhaps 0 to 10 degrees C. Presumably this would require slightly heavier loads. I think that the larger group sizes and different PIO would still be acceptable for 50-150 m aim-at-the-lungs hunting, but not being on a node means a random effect on the individual bullet's PIO (plus the difference in bullet drop). It would make it unwise to attempt a head shot, even though the rifle itself can produce excellent groups and assuming the shooter is sufficiently good.
I have thought of the following options:
* Change to VV N555, which is believed to be less temperature-dependent and probably a better choice for a 143 grain bullet for my calibre than N550.
* Change to VV N150 or N160, as I have got the impression that single-base powders are often more temperature stable.
* Replace the muzzle break with a heavy suppressor, in the assumption that the added weight at the muzzle would make the rifle behave more like a varmint barrel. (My Tikka M65 Continental in the same calibre has wider nodes than the thin barrel of the Sako 85 Hunter, perhaps 0.2 - 0.3 grains wide.)
* Replace the muzzle break with a barrel tuner and adjust onto the node.
* Load up a few cartridges of each increment from 41.6 to perhaps 42.0 and select the most fitting based on the expected temperature of the individual hunt.
* Use the varmint-barreled rifle instead when hunting from a tower. It's 1 kg heavier and equipped with a long-range 5-25 target scope, so it's not a drop-in replacement for my light hunting rifle with a Zeiss Victory HT scope, particularly not at dawn and dusk.
First of all, am I on the right track and pondering appropriate alternatives?
What are your thoughts and experience on this topic?
Thank in advance,
Nic