M
Montana Pete
Guest
I am beginning to figure that 100 yds and 200 yds are not the same ball game.
I came up with a bullet for my 22-250 that does best of anything I have at 100 yds. A second bullet does not do as well as the afore mentioned bullet at 100 yds, but turns around and outperforms the first bullet at 200 yds. Same powder used in both loads.
The first bullet is the 52 gr. Nosler Custom Competition bullet with 30 gr. #3031. The second bullet is the Sierra Varminter 60 gr. flatbase HP with 29 gr same powder.
On a couple of range sessions now, the lighter bullet takes the blue ribbon at 100 yds. I just used both yesterday at 100 and the Nosler came through again at 100 with tightest groups.
At 200 yd the heavier bullet does significantly better than the lighter bullet. Groups go from around 1.7 inch with the Nosler to about 0.9 inch with the Sierra. This is not one isolated range session, but several.
Being rather new and self taught to this "small group game," I am beginning to figure out that a good short range load is not necessarily a good long range load.
Is this a fairly common experience?
As a final comment, people may ask why I like IMR 3031. Well, I myself don't like it so much as that my rifle likes it. I don't know why. I have used half a dozen powders at least, and the rifle just likes the old powder I have mentioned. IMR 3031 is one of the oldest powders still manufactured, having been designed prior to WW II for loading 303 British Enfield ammunition. Thank God it is still being manufactured in fresh lots.
Anyway, both these two bullets have proved out well in my rifle, but what is best at 100 is not best at 200.
Any comments are welcome-------
I came up with a bullet for my 22-250 that does best of anything I have at 100 yds. A second bullet does not do as well as the afore mentioned bullet at 100 yds, but turns around and outperforms the first bullet at 200 yds. Same powder used in both loads.
The first bullet is the 52 gr. Nosler Custom Competition bullet with 30 gr. #3031. The second bullet is the Sierra Varminter 60 gr. flatbase HP with 29 gr same powder.
On a couple of range sessions now, the lighter bullet takes the blue ribbon at 100 yds. I just used both yesterday at 100 and the Nosler came through again at 100 with tightest groups.
At 200 yd the heavier bullet does significantly better than the lighter bullet. Groups go from around 1.7 inch with the Nosler to about 0.9 inch with the Sierra. This is not one isolated range session, but several.
Being rather new and self taught to this "small group game," I am beginning to figure out that a good short range load is not necessarily a good long range load.
Is this a fairly common experience?
As a final comment, people may ask why I like IMR 3031. Well, I myself don't like it so much as that my rifle likes it. I don't know why. I have used half a dozen powders at least, and the rifle just likes the old powder I have mentioned. IMR 3031 is one of the oldest powders still manufactured, having been designed prior to WW II for loading 303 British Enfield ammunition. Thank God it is still being manufactured in fresh lots.
Anyway, both these two bullets have proved out well in my rifle, but what is best at 100 is not best at 200.
Any comments are welcome-------