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Crony use

Old 04-15-2014, 04:51 PM
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Spike
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Default Crony use

Question, when using a crony what do you look for? do you want all your loads to be with in a with in a certain speed? If so what is an acceptable variance? 50fps, 25fps. If the bullet speed is very close does that mean your loads are more accurate?
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Old 04-15-2014, 05:34 PM
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I get loads that can variate +/- 25fps and I am happy with my accuracy. Of course my version of accuracy is not shooting sub-MOA groups with a bench rifle or competition shooting. I am just a hunter and plinker.
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Old 04-15-2014, 05:36 PM
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"Accuracy" is really the end result of a number of different influences and variables coming together. Although ammunition plays a part, it's a small part in comparison to some of the others.

That projectile you launch has some characteristics. Length, Sectional Density, Weight, Ballistic Coefficient, etc. Provided that each of these are the same and they're fired under exactly the same conditions and at the same velocity, their trajectories will be the same - in other words, their points of impact will be the same. If the velocity of one of those projectiles is lower than another, it will theoretically strike lower on your target. Maybe not enough for you to notice without a caliper, but lower, nonetheless.

So, the closer your rounds are in velocity, the more consistent and predictable they'll become. There is no "gold standard" in terms of extreme spread or standard deviation, only that "less is better."

However, it's important to note that you can have the best ammunition made and still miss the target if your fundamentals aren't up to snuff. On the other hand, sound fundamentals can easily mitigate the variations in your ammunition under reasonable hunting conditions.
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Old 04-15-2014, 09:25 PM
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Originally Posted by sauer14
Question, when using a crony what do you look for? do you want all your loads to be with in a with in a certain speed? If so what is an acceptable variance? 50fps, 25fps. If the bullet speed is very close does that mean your loads are more accurate?
Read up on ladder testing for load development. What you are asking is the general premise there. If you have a large ES or SD, your groups will tend to string vertically. By ladder testing, you can identify the most forgiving range of charge weights to produce consistent muzzle velocities and regular accuracy. In other words, if your ladder test shows 3" difference at 300yrds from 28.2grn to 28.4grn, but then only a 2" spread between 28.8, 29.0, 29.2, 29.4, it makes sense to load 29.0grns and then play with your coal to get group sizes you like. At 28.4grns, a small mis-weigh means 1" difference in impact. At 29.0, a much larger margin for error in charging yields far less effect. It also lets you know when more powder doesn't give you any extra velocity worth something, so you can save a ill powder cost.
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Old 04-15-2014, 10:57 PM
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premise there. If you have a large ES or SD, your groups will tend to string vertically. By ladder testing, you can identify the most forgiving range of charge

Please excuse my ignorance but what is ES or SD? and what is ladder testing? What I don't understand is when I reload I use a digital powder scale, all my powder charges are EXACTLY the same amount every time. I measure each and every charge and sometimes I still get 50-60 fps difference in a 4 shot group,why?
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Old 04-16-2014, 03:03 AM
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http://optimalchargeweight.embarqspa...pes/4533485759
Sauer,check this out for ladder testing.
IMO,it could be cases,of the same brand but a different lot, neck tension[bullet grip],cartrage over all length, hot or cool barrel temp,the area that the bullet goes thru the crony[different area each shot].
Did you start with new cases or once fired from another gun? Are you using ball powder? Are you neck sizing or full length sizing?
Sauer,PERSEVERE,you will learn and beat the problem!!! While you are at it,learn a whole lot about hand loading?
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Old 04-16-2014, 07:49 AM
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Originally Posted by sauer14
premise there. If you have a large ES or SD, your groups will tend to string vertically. By ladder testing, you can identify the most forgiving range of charge

Please excuse my ignorance but what is ES or SD? and what is ladder testing? What I don't understand is when I reload I use a digital powder scale, all my powder charges are EXACTLY the same amount every time. I measure each and every charge and sometimes I still get 50-60 fps difference in a 4 shot group,why?
ES = Extreme Spread. This is the difference from your slowest measured to fastest measured shots.

SD = Standard deviation. This is an average of the difference between the average of all shots and each individual shot.

The relevance of the two: ES tells me how far spread my loads are. It does NOT tell me whether that spread is "normal" or if it was just one or two high or low values. SD tells me how far spread my loads are on average. So are they all evenly distributed along the ES? Was there ONE slow load and the rest were close together? These, among other statistical values paint a picture of the 'forgiveness' of a given load (like %RSD - which is the relative scale of the SD to the average, i.e. 50fps means a lot more to a 1900fps load than a 4300fps load).

So basically, your 50fps difference is your ES.

I hate to be the one to break it to you, but your digital powder scale is not as accurate as you wish it was. "EXACTLY" the same amount is a LONG stretch. For precision loading, you should be at least double checking your charges on a BALANCE, not a scale. Specifically, digital scales will experience instrumentation drift with repetition, and they ALL have published precision levels, often +/- 0.1grn (Hornady LnL's, RCBS Chargemasters, Lyman micro-touch...) so you might be looking at 28.3 vs. 28.5grns, and never know it because the instrument is still reading 28.3. And that's only certified when it leaves the factory, very easy to see a discrepancy of +/-0.15+ over time (had that happen with a Hornady LnL and an RCBS). Again, you HAVE to check every charge on a balance beam BALANCE - not just use a digital SCALE. Trust but verify.

Ladder testing will illustrate for you as to why you might experience high variability. For a certain range of charge weights, you'll usually see very little change in velocity even with a fairly large difference in powder charge, however, for other weights, very slight charge weight changes can cause extreme differences. Ladder testing shines a light on this.

Ladder testing is a process of load development to determine the most forgiving charge weight range. Some shooters call it the Optimum Charge Weight Envelope, or Accuracy Window, whatever. I call it forgiveness. It's a way to find a charge weight that will "forgive you" for having +/-0.05 or 0.1grn precision.

In other words, this test helps you figure out whether your selected powder will have a high ES based on a controllable variation in powder weight.

The testing goes like this:

Using one powder, one bullet, one primer, one brass type - load a few shots of each charge weight, increasing by 0.1-0.3grn per step from your starting load to a max load (same COAL). At the range - 300-500yrds, shoot all of the shots at the same POA on a tall target, noting which shots were which as you go. The long range is meant to create vertical stringing based on velocity/drop/ToF. As expected, the heavier charges run faster, so they climb up the target like rungs on a ladder. However, you'll likely find that several charge weights group much more tightly together than other weights - this is the load range you want to play in. This is the most forgiving charge weight, meaning it gives LESS variation for the same deviation in charge weight.

Stole this pic from:
6mmbr.com Ladder Testing Article - worth reading...



So based on this pic, I would expect that loads of 29.0grns to have more variation in velocity (ES) because the spread from every 0.3grns is far larger than the variation effect at say 30.0grns. Same deal for 30.8grn loads, I would expect these faster rounds to have higher variability than a 30.0grn load, based on this ladder. At 29.0 (which is REALLY 28.9 - 29.1grn), the ES is likely much higher than at 30.0. Not having any scale on the pic, lets say that spread between the 28.9 and 29.2 shots (0.3grn change) raised the POI 3". So loading 29.0grns (which is really 28.9 to 29.1grns based on +/-0.1) might mean ~2" variation, which might be that 50fps you're seeing. On the other hand, if you look at the blue shaded region, the height difference between 29.8 and 30.4grns is about half the height of 28.9 to 29.2grns. So if I load 30.0, which is really 29.9 to 30.1grns, I might only see about 1/2" variation, maybe 15fps ES.

I generally find a powder that shoots small groups for me compared to a few test powders, then I ladder test with that selected winning powder. After ladder testing, I dial in the COAL (seating depth, aka bullet jump) and neck tension to get the accuracy I want.

Clear as mud?

That's not to say that loading in the "Forgiveness Window" will produce match winning accuracy, it simply means that you're eliminating/mitigating velocity variation (and resulting vertical stringing at range) due to powder charge weight. Velocity spread can also come from inconsistent brass, bullet weights, firing too fast (ammo or rifle warming up), inconsistent neck tension, inconsistent seating depth/COAL, primer variability, etc. Ladder testing just helps to ensure you're getting a consistent combustion, yielding consistent velocities.

But, it does seem to work for me.

Last edited by Nomercy448; 10-23-2014 at 07:51 AM.
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Old 04-16-2014, 05:06 PM
  #8  
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Wow, very good information guys, thx for all of your help. I do not have access to a good 300-500 hundred yd range but my friend does. I usually full length resize because I have several different 308s, I do use ball powder sometimes and I have had good luck with it and I try to let my barrel cool down between shots.
One last question, how important is neck tension? I never crimp my rifle ammo because I don't shoot semi autos and nobody I have asked can tell me if it works or not.
Thx for all the replies.
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Old 04-17-2014, 09:34 PM
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Originally Posted by sauer14
One last question, how important is neck tension? I never crimp my rifle ammo because I don't shoot semi autos and nobody I have asked can tell me if it works or not.
Thx for all the replies.
Two different "meanings" here:

Crimp tension, i.e. consistent "grip" on the bullets in the case, is important. The only real control you have there is 1) brand of brass, 2) age of brass, i.e. number of firings, and 3) how much crimp or taper you're applying with the seating die. Older brass gets work hardened and will grip differently than new brass. See below as to why nothing else likely matters for your rifle.

Now, "neck tension" generally refers to the grip on the bullets by the brass, then the diameter of the throats. If you have a factory chamber, you don't need to worry about neck tension. To properly set neck tension, you'd need to know your bullet dia, brass thickness (and turn your necks for uniformity of the mouth/neck), and chamber throat diameter. Factory rifles will have quite loose throat dimensions, so neck turning for uniformity will likely just mean you're increasing the gap in your throat, not actually producing concentricity.
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