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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Identifying loads during load development
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<blockquote data-quote="BigJake54" data-source="post: 1619079" data-attributes="member: 43493"><p>My technique is similar to memtb. I test in groups of 25, with each 5 shot group varying in powder charge by .5 grains. No other variables. I place the each 5 shot group into a loading block I made with the lowest charge in the first row to the highest charge in the fifth row. No one touches these except me. I record every round I load into a notebook, which then gets transferred to an Excel spreadsheet (separate tab for each gun). At the range, I mark each target with the load, date tested, range conditions, etc. All results get recorded in my spreadsheet before further testing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BigJake54, post: 1619079, member: 43493"] My technique is similar to memtb. I test in groups of 25, with each 5 shot group varying in powder charge by .5 grains. No other variables. I place the each 5 shot group into a loading block I made with the lowest charge in the first row to the highest charge in the fifth row. No one touches these except me. I record every round I load into a notebook, which then gets transferred to an Excel spreadsheet (separate tab for each gun). At the range, I mark each target with the load, date tested, range conditions, etc. All results get recorded in my spreadsheet before further testing. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Identifying loads during load development
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