Incomplete fireforming
Wow, I couldn't agree with this more.
Nicely put.
al
I agree, that is well put. Part of the problem is the shooter being new to this chamber and as a result, the fireforming load being a little on the anemic side; educated guess on my part. The reason I say this is that I have a 6mm BR 1:14" twist that I've developed tested pet loads with. I have another barrel chambered by Twud's gunsmith using the same reamer Twud's chamber was reamed with along with using the same gunsmith. My second barrel is a
1:7.5" twist I use for the heavy 6MM VLDs. When I fireformed brass for that brand new barrel I was using a beginning load a friend gave to me who has the same chamber by the same gunsmith. You might say I was operating in a 'comfort zone' envelope with respect to pressures, etc. My brass came out perfect the first time.
Many people, when fireforming a load in a new chamber they are unfamiliar with, default to the standard maxim of reducing their load by 10%. I found this out on my own by beginning with a rather timid load with my first .22-250 AI. Now when fireforming for an Ackley I go straight to the max. load for the parent cartridge for my initial fireforming load and as the low end start for subsequent load development. In some cases, depending on the Ackley caliber, I end up 2 or three grains or more beyond the max. parent load; that's the whole point of paying homage to the Ackley altar. Ackley himself referred to using a 'snappy load' for intitial fireforming.
The bottom line is the more you're in this game, the more you learn and can pass the info. on to others. That is what I really like about this sport; the camraderie and willingness to share information. The other thing I've noticed is that old maxims, while being accurate 70 to 90% of the time, aren't necessarily cast in stone. One has to be willing to get away from pre-conceived patterns and methods sometimes.
Example: Everyone mostly follows the standard practice of loading their bullets into or touching the lands during load development as a starting point. In my 1:7.5" Kreiger 6mm BR, I was shooting the 105 grn. Bergers by loading touching the lands. The rifle was shooting ok but I knew it had to shoot better. Of course, I tried going further into the lands with no improvement. I e-mailed Eric Stecker (Berger bullets) with my dilemma. Eric suggested I jump the bullets as much as .040. Well, I went to the range with rounds loaded long, accompanied by a Wilson seater, set of calipers with a bullet comparator and began shooting. I tried .010 off the lands and when I got to .063 from the lands, I hit paydirt. My groups were the one hole groups I was looking for @200 meters. I went past .063 and the groups began to open a little. I repeated the process several times to validate my initial discovery and my load is now 30.2 grn. of Varget with Berger 105 grn. VLDs .063 off the lands. I probably would have never gone that far away from the lands on my own because my thinking was hampered by traditional methodology that works most of the time; but not in this situation.
Lou Baccino