rsrw
New member
i saw several hiccups in things you have said.
you said benchrest and then said small groups
then you said cutting a line...not an issue in GROUP shooting.
so group shooting or score shooting ?
have you ever shot 5 five shot targets on the same day and still averaged under .2 ?
describe your rifle and loads
I’m not sure if I will shoot group or score. I’m trying to find out what’s fairly close to me that I can shoot at.
I have not shot 5, five shot groups on the same day. I will typically shoot 3, targets that have 5 targets to shoot at one each one. So typically, 15 groups a day. They do almost always stay at .2 or lower. I may on a rare occasion get a .23 or so, but it is rare.
As I said the rifle is a 223, with a Pierce action, Kreiger barrel with a 12 twist and a Trigger Tech trigger. It is on not the best stock, a Bell and Carlson. Would like to get another stock for it, but just have not done so yet. Since the rifle seems to be firing good, I have put most of my money into reloading tools. The chamber of the barrel was reamed and the gun was built by Pierce Engineering of Michigan.
I shoot with Lapua brass, a 52 grain Nosler Custom Competition bullet. They are a hpbt with a very small metplat. It is loaded with 25.5 grains of Benchrest powder, which is checked and verified on two separate scales. I am however waiting right now on some Barts custom bullets. 52 grain hp/flat base. They are supposed to be very good I hear and I am told the flat base is better at 100 yards than the boat tail design. I’ll see.
As far as loading procedure here it is. All the bullets are weight sorted, the cases are also. The cases are trimmed then neck turned following their first firing. I use a Redding type S die with bushings to full length size the cases. I full length size after every firing. I do not neck size only. The neck tension is set at .002”. The separated bullets are then seated using a Redding competition seating die. All rounds are of course checked for Concentricity after seating. I am a bit, well according to my wife, a lot OCD regarding these things. However the rounds are right when I finish with them. It takes me much longer than most people because I double and triple check each round at every step as I make it. My dad and granddad taught me “measure twice, cut once.” So I always do.
Anyway, that’s what I have and what i shoot and how I make it, pretty much. Hope that answers your questions.