they're shooting pretty good. its amazing how you can throw just about any load together with the BR cases and get great accuracy. it would be interesting to see what some load development would do.
@RobsReloading I would say, how well it shoots is the quality of the barrel, and how easy it is to find a load and how well a cartridge shoots different loads is the case design I've been building and chambering rifles for 12 years now. A majority of it has been for F-class shooters, myself included, so lots of 223's, 308's, 6 dashers, and 6brx's. of course, there has been other stuff like 284's, 280's r'saums, and WSM's. in addition to that, there have been lots of hunting and varmint cartridges, also. I just want it to be known, I am not just a google expert, lol, and I can say from lots of experience that the BR cases are very forgiving. some cases just have more potential than others i believe.
There’s a few of them that seem to shoot so many guns with so many factory loads so well that I’m a little suspicious their 100 yard range might be a little more like an 80 yard range. Seems like their public range groups are never quite as good…..
An angle is an angle, closer or far, ones the projectile leaves the bore it's at the mercy of external physics. That said, 10 shot groups would be a far better indication of groups than 3, obviously.
@@sauce6092 If you're starting from a perfectly clean bore, I would say yes. Fire enough rounds before any significant changes settle out (bore fouling), and collect group data thereafter.
@@sauce6092 It also depends on application. For range practice loads I like to not have a completely cold bore when testing groups because I don't want a cold bore shift to make a group look artifically bad. When I'm shooting hunting loads, I like to wait much longer between shots so the barrel has little to no heat in it because ideally all shots are cold bore.
Rob, have you tried any of the sierra tipped game kings. In my 6mm i can get them to shoot sub 1/4 moa groups consistently with the 90gr. I would love to see your thoughts on them.
Great groups in that wind
they're shooting pretty good. its amazing how you can throw just about any load together with the BR cases and get great accuracy. it would be interesting to see what some load development would do.
@@reloadingfun is it the BR cases or high quality barrels?
@RobsReloading I would say, how well it shoots is the quality of the barrel, and how easy it is to find a load and how well a cartridge shoots different loads is the case design
I've been building and chambering rifles for 12 years now. A majority of it has been for F-class shooters, myself included, so lots of 223's, 308's, 6 dashers, and 6brx's. of course, there has been other stuff like 284's, 280's r'saums, and WSM's. in addition to that, there have been lots of hunting and varmint cartridges, also. I just want it to be known, I am not just a google expert, lol, and I can say from lots of experience that the BR cases are very forgiving. some cases just have more potential than others i believe.
awesome, we're shooting on paper, too!
Great longer range group. Some loads a shooters don't do that well @ 100.
That's a proper group. Not some 3 shot 100yd group that other UA-camrs post saying "My rifle averages 0.25 moa."
There’s a few of them that seem to shoot so many guns with so many factory loads so well that I’m a little suspicious their 100 yard range might be a little more like an 80 yard range. Seems like their public range groups are never quite as good…..
An angle is an angle, closer or far, ones the projectile leaves the bore it's at the mercy of external physics.
That said, 10 shot groups would be a far better indication of groups than 3, obviously.
Quick question. Is is proper to shoot a "fouler/sighter" before shooting groups?
@@sauce6092 If you're starting from a perfectly clean bore, I would say yes. Fire enough rounds before any significant changes settle out (bore fouling), and collect group data thereafter.
@@sauce6092 It also depends on application. For range practice loads I like to not have a completely cold bore when testing groups because I don't want a cold bore shift to make a group look artifically bad. When I'm shooting hunting loads, I like to wait much longer between shots so the barrel has little to no heat in it because ideally all shots are cold bore.
Rob, have you tried any of the sierra tipped game kings. In my 6mm i can get them to shoot sub 1/4 moa groups consistently with the 90gr. I would love to see your thoughts on them.
I’m really interested in trying that bullet. Have you tried many powders with it?
@@wildnorthadventures this is the extent of my testing with the bullet in dasher
105s would probably do better in that wind, for 80s I'd take that group