Fed 215-W209-140g Powder
#1
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Rapid City, South Dakota
Posts: 3,732
Fed 215-W209-140g Powder
Part of the last 4 days was spent looking for an accurate Blackhorn 140g load load from the Omega Dream Season using Federal 215 primers. It never was found. It seemed like the scope was broke or some such.
Note: Western Powders recommends 120g of Blackhorn be the maximum load.
This morning i decided to try the W209 primer instead. The Dream Season has a 4X scope mounted. The temperature whilst shooting was 2. It was lightly snowing during the shoot. The rifle was kept in house through the night. The load was 140g Blackhorn, 300g PT Bullet, short black sabot, W209 primer. Range was 200 yard. Three shots were taken; the first from a totally clean barrel. The breech plug was a brand new, never used, standard Omega plug. Snow flakes can be seen falling past the target.
Then the breech plug was removed, and the rifle thoroughly cleaned. The PR breech plug was installed, and the target replaced. The rifle, scope, bullet, powder, sabot was the same as before. The primer was switched from W209 to Federal 215. The temperature was 5 this go around, and the sun kinda shining. Three shots were taken from 200 yard. The second shot couldn't be seen on the target, using the spotting scope. It couldn't be seen from 3 feet away either. It may have missed the backer at the low right, if i understood the marks in the snow behind the target. Here is 2/3 of a three shot group.
Then i went back out to 200 yard, and fired a fourth shot at the target. Now the target looks like three shots were taken. What an awful 4 shot group 'eh? Not even a good 3 shot group.
The Federal 215 primer never produced an accurate 140g load. It seems i tried about 25 shots using several different 300g bullet, and none were accurate. One try using the W209 primer, resulted in a reasonable 200 yard three shot grouping. How about that? The photos of the primers, and breech plugs show the W209 primers allowed considerable 'through by' right through the primer, and the breech plug is lightly covered with soot. The PR breech plug is quite clean, and so are the Federal 215 primers. The PR adapters allowed zero 'through by'. One adapter showed a tiny bit of blow by. That one is the one used to make the second shot, that ended up out by Eenarr.
Note: Western Powders recommends 120g of Blackhorn be the maximum load.
This morning i decided to try the W209 primer instead. The Dream Season has a 4X scope mounted. The temperature whilst shooting was 2. It was lightly snowing during the shoot. The rifle was kept in house through the night. The load was 140g Blackhorn, 300g PT Bullet, short black sabot, W209 primer. Range was 200 yard. Three shots were taken; the first from a totally clean barrel. The breech plug was a brand new, never used, standard Omega plug. Snow flakes can be seen falling past the target.
Then the breech plug was removed, and the rifle thoroughly cleaned. The PR breech plug was installed, and the target replaced. The rifle, scope, bullet, powder, sabot was the same as before. The primer was switched from W209 to Federal 215. The temperature was 5 this go around, and the sun kinda shining. Three shots were taken from 200 yard. The second shot couldn't be seen on the target, using the spotting scope. It couldn't be seen from 3 feet away either. It may have missed the backer at the low right, if i understood the marks in the snow behind the target. Here is 2/3 of a three shot group.
Then i went back out to 200 yard, and fired a fourth shot at the target. Now the target looks like three shots were taken. What an awful 4 shot group 'eh? Not even a good 3 shot group.
The Federal 215 primer never produced an accurate 140g load. It seems i tried about 25 shots using several different 300g bullet, and none were accurate. One try using the W209 primer, resulted in a reasonable 200 yard three shot grouping. How about that? The photos of the primers, and breech plugs show the W209 primers allowed considerable 'through by' right through the primer, and the breech plug is lightly covered with soot. The PR breech plug is quite clean, and so are the Federal 215 primers. The PR adapters allowed zero 'through by'. One adapter showed a tiny bit of blow by. That one is the one used to make the second shot, that ended up out by Eenarr.
#2
Spike
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Quebec, Canada
Posts: 72
I don't know if I am breaking a rule of the forum but with all respect this is definitely not the first gizmo made by PR that is not working and that is not delivering advertised results.
Sorry for your money.
Sorry for your money.
#4
What you did not report on was the condition of your Sabots.
I think I would have checked that right of the bat to see the condition of them.
140 Grains is a lot of BlackHorn. Ive heard of very few guys getting any good accuracy with that sort of load. 130 grains YES. But 140 not so much.
Keep plugging away with that PR kit. I would not throw the baby out with the bath water over one range session.
I think I would have checked that right of the bat to see the condition of them.
140 Grains is a lot of BlackHorn. Ive heard of very few guys getting any good accuracy with that sort of load. 130 grains YES. But 140 not so much.
Keep plugging away with that PR kit. I would not throw the baby out with the bath water over one range session.
#6
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Rapid City, South Dakota
Posts: 3,732
What you did not report on was the condition of your Sabots.
I think I would have checked that right of the bat to see the condition of them.
140 Grains is a lot of BlackHorn. Ive heard of very few guys getting any good accuracy with that sort of load. 130 grains YES. But 140 not so much.
Keep plugging away with that PR kit. I would not throw the baby out with the bath water over one range session.
I think I would have checked that right of the bat to see the condition of them.
140 Grains is a lot of BlackHorn. Ive heard of very few guys getting any good accuracy with that sort of load. 130 grains YES. But 140 not so much.
Keep plugging away with that PR kit. I would not throw the baby out with the bath water over one range session.
If/when i try these adapters again, the powder load will be substantially less................substantially.
Today was the fourth day trying the Federal 215 primer and 140g Blackhorn. Probably 25 times with different 300g Bullets. The results were consistently poor.................i began to think the scope was broke. The W209 primer revealed the scope is OK.
#7
Roughly 130gr (91gr by weight) and a 325gr FTX is a thumper load. Ive only tried it in a 52cal though. The sabots hold up very well.
Ive only used 140gr in the Pacnor 45cal and the Harvester smooth blue also held up fine.
Ive only used 140gr in the Pacnor 45cal and the Harvester smooth blue also held up fine.
#8
Interesting. Just glad I don't have worry about going out that far to take game with a ML! If I need to go out that far I can use my three banded Enfield.
My biggest problem is I don't have an long distance range to try it!
My biggest problem is I don't have an long distance range to try it!
#9
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Rapid City, South Dakota
Posts: 3,732
Originally Posted by fisher1
I wonder if a std. LR primer would be more consistant?
#10
Geez..140 gr of BH209! That load has to smack your shoulder pretty good with that 300 gr bullet. I'm not recoil shy by any means but IMO using that much powder is a waste. I know you're trying to squeeze as much accuracy out of your rifle's as possible. But why punish yourself for only a minor accuracy increase? And in this case there was no increase in accuracy at all and probably a loss of it. How much energy are you gaining by using that much powder over, let's say, a 110 gr or 120 gr charge with much better accuracy?