DrBob
AH enthusiast
Please explain "you have never published data"? The only pressure data I have personally acquired was using the Pressure Trace system for my 458 XL article. I have thought about it for the 470, but Wright's extensive pressure work published in his Third edition is a good starting point since I use the same powders. Without it, the best "feel" is regulation without any extraction issues. I will dig up Wright's discussion of belling of chambers and put that in my next posting.@DrBob you’ve cited your claim several times, but you’ve never published the data. I’ve searched the Internet and cannot find the data either. You’re making an incorrect inference that the loads of RL15 with various stuffings will have an identical corollary relationship with IMR3031.
As has been mentioned many times, 3031 has the lightest recoil and tends to have the same pressure spike properties as stranded cordite. The benefit is that it reproduces stresses to the barrels of a double gun in a manner similar to what was endured a century ago at the proof house.
The reason you won’t find published loads abounding is multi-faceted, but it comes down to lawyers usually. Lawyers do not like published load data that does not fill a case. This is why you see published loads for IMR4831 so frequently.
Just recently a member of this forum with a lovely 470NE ordered up some custom ammo from “the experts in custom loading”. They opted for 4831 rather than 3031, even though I recommended against it. The owner is lucky to be alive and a nice $20-something thousand dollar British double is now in the graveyard. The 4831 load was within modern pressure parameters for a 470NE, but it was definitely not a stranded cordite equivelant load at 2050fps like 3031 would be. The net result was barrel rupture halfway down the tube.
If you have the pressure data using a variety of stuffing mediums for 3031 I would appreciate seeing that rather than the RL15 data you’ve previously cited.
Yes, 3031 would have the lightest recoil because the ejected products of combustion would have the lowest mass. The heavier the charge, the more ejecta added to the mass of the bullet...hence felt recoil goes up with slower and slower powders with larger loads. Some published loads use 120 grains of slow powder and that is felt recoil I don't want. As for the loss of the rifle with 4831, one has to know the makeup of the load including bullet type, primer and case. What were the measured pressure for those custom rounds? "A $20K British double?" Ah, I can't think of a new British double for that price so when was it made? How tight was the bore? What were the condition of the barrels?
"Good to know. My notes from Ross Seyfried state that if using Dacron stuffing, the max load is 77-78gr of powder with 3031". Then why, with his review of the Ruger No.1 conversion by Hamiton Bowen, did he wax on about RL15 with dacron filler? Which powder did he first use and if 3031 did he choose to then follow Kynock with RL15? Kynock wads are very nice.... they wind up a gritty feeling powder... I know.... with the wind in my face ... the pulverized wad gets blow back into one's face!
Lastly, for now, I respect the opinions of Wright and Woods. Feel free to criticize them for their admonitions. Everyone is free to use whatever they want. After all, it's you who are pulling the trigger.