Kimmeridgien
Active Member
I'm using GRT OBT for .375 H&H Magnum and 6,5x55SE. I found that if you do the following:
* Weight sort your brass and do volume (H2O weight) measurement of the brass that you are using for the bullet in question
* Enter a good approximation for your barrel length including muzzle break (and probably suppressor)
* Enter the correct seating depth (i.e. total cartridge length minus the length of the bullet)
you will get a very good indication of:
* Node charge weights by use of the OBT calculator
* Which powders are especially worth considering and reasonably well their ordering
* What fill and burn ratio can be expected for each powder
For the .375 H&H Magnum you can't expect reliable simulated muzzle velocity. It's unclear whether the simulated pressure is accurate. For this caliber I have come to rely on published load data in the Norwegian book "Ladeboken", which for this caliber lists charge weights in a 2 grain range. I have found that this range contains either a full node or a half node just below max pressure. The same is probably true for Norma's published load data. I am using Ladeboken's max weights for TSX 270 grains, which is about 10% above the GRT nominal max pressure, as a reference for my load limit. No signs of overpressure. Apart from incorrect muzzle velocity simulation (which has very little effect on the node weight), I found that the ordering of the powders in terms of simulated velocity is not correct for lighter bullets. E.g. N550 gives max velocity for TSX 300 and TSX 270 in both simulation and reality that is faster than N540, while N540 is actually faster than N550 for TTSX 250 in reality (but not in simulation). You will notice that US load data is utterly useless, due to its ridiculous range from min to max.
I found that with good tool input, the GRT OBT simulation predicts the real node to within some +- 0.5 or even +-0.3 grains. This means great savings on components when working up a load. For this caliber, the full nodes are some 3-4 grains apart.
Please note that all the three requirements I am listing at the beginning of this post are essential for the usefulness of the OBT simulation. My lightest .375 H&H Magnum brass (Hornady) weighs about 15.2 gram. My heaviest (old RWS) weighs about 18.0 gram. The difference in volume corresponds to a difference in charge weight of some 2-3 grains for the same node. Similarly, seating depth directly corresponds to case volume. And total barrel length determines the time it takes for the shock wave traversal.
My experience with 6,5x55SE is also very good (but I have recently been more focused on my .375). The Swede is a much more common caliber, so its simulated muzzle velocity is probably more accurate.
You will find lots of people in forums who wouldn't know a clue if it jumped up and bit them. Any claim that there is no correlation between brass weight and volume is hogwash. Any claim that GRT OBT is flawed is a solid indicator that the person couldn't be bothered or trained to do it right.
* Weight sort your brass and do volume (H2O weight) measurement of the brass that you are using for the bullet in question
* Enter a good approximation for your barrel length including muzzle break (and probably suppressor)
* Enter the correct seating depth (i.e. total cartridge length minus the length of the bullet)
you will get a very good indication of:
* Node charge weights by use of the OBT calculator
* Which powders are especially worth considering and reasonably well their ordering
* What fill and burn ratio can be expected for each powder
For the .375 H&H Magnum you can't expect reliable simulated muzzle velocity. It's unclear whether the simulated pressure is accurate. For this caliber I have come to rely on published load data in the Norwegian book "Ladeboken", which for this caliber lists charge weights in a 2 grain range. I have found that this range contains either a full node or a half node just below max pressure. The same is probably true for Norma's published load data. I am using Ladeboken's max weights for TSX 270 grains, which is about 10% above the GRT nominal max pressure, as a reference for my load limit. No signs of overpressure. Apart from incorrect muzzle velocity simulation (which has very little effect on the node weight), I found that the ordering of the powders in terms of simulated velocity is not correct for lighter bullets. E.g. N550 gives max velocity for TSX 300 and TSX 270 in both simulation and reality that is faster than N540, while N540 is actually faster than N550 for TTSX 250 in reality (but not in simulation). You will notice that US load data is utterly useless, due to its ridiculous range from min to max.
I found that with good tool input, the GRT OBT simulation predicts the real node to within some +- 0.5 or even +-0.3 grains. This means great savings on components when working up a load. For this caliber, the full nodes are some 3-4 grains apart.
Please note that all the three requirements I am listing at the beginning of this post are essential for the usefulness of the OBT simulation. My lightest .375 H&H Magnum brass (Hornady) weighs about 15.2 gram. My heaviest (old RWS) weighs about 18.0 gram. The difference in volume corresponds to a difference in charge weight of some 2-3 grains for the same node. Similarly, seating depth directly corresponds to case volume. And total barrel length determines the time it takes for the shock wave traversal.
My experience with 6,5x55SE is also very good (but I have recently been more focused on my .375). The Swede is a much more common caliber, so its simulated muzzle velocity is probably more accurate.
You will find lots of people in forums who wouldn't know a clue if it jumped up and bit them. Any claim that there is no correlation between brass weight and volume is hogwash. Any claim that GRT OBT is flawed is a solid indicator that the person couldn't be bothered or trained to do it right.
