Desperatezulu
AH enthusiast
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2015
- Messages
- 398
- Reaction score
- 783
- Location
- South Africa
- Hunted
- South Africa, Zimbabwe, UK
It sounds like you have not chrono'd your loads?I'm loading Somchem S365 (local) 35 gr charge weight with a 100g Hornady Interlock.
I plotted some lines on a graph based on charge weight vs f/ps to get a general idea of the speed I'd get with my powder selection. I expected I could get a good feel about what speeds to expect when pushing to the max figure. Now I trust this output for other reasons and perhaps I'm out by 40 f/ps either way because the powder manufacturer tests on a 24" barrel, but if was serious about the accuracy of the graph I would crono this load to compare. Gordon's tells me I'm at 2400 f/ps with my load where I think I'm around 2700 f/ps, assuming the relationship between speed and powder is linear. It might not be but only by a small amount imo.
I've highlighted some of my preferred loads by adding either the speed I want or the load I want.
243, Hornady 100g SP, Somchem S365
www.desmos.com
If not, none of your conclusions are vaguely valid - just speculation. Questioning the veracity of GRT (or any other internal ballistics software) without following any basic load development and testing procedures is focusing on the wrong place. What is your case capacity (gr H2O?) - after muzzle velocity, this is the next biggest variable.
Regarding the simulation that GRT does on different powder types - they use empirical data fed back by users to test and refine the powder burn rate simulation. So it is not just theoretical. My experience with it has been that it is very powerful and accurate if good data is inputted.
Secondly the relationship between powder charge and velocity is not linear. This may be an ok assumption for small increments but it is not appropriate for a big range such as the difference between min and max.
To compound the risk factor, Somchem S365 is notorious for its unpredictable (read NON-linear) behaviour - certain lots were recalled and are recommended to avoid. It is not a powder to be exploring the limits of with casual reloading/load development practices.
More than a few 243s went kaboom with one of the hot lots (I think Lot 71?)
Unless you follow proper load development practices, whatever reloading you do is going to be risky. WIthout measuring, you just don't have any idea how close you are to disaster.Do I take the risk and load over the manufacturer max value?