newbie needs some help...again

patross79

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 25, 2010
Messages
163
Location
central nebraska
so i have been shooting/doping my remington chambered in 338 lapua and from 100 to 425 it has been shooting great(for me) at sub moa. my 5 shot group at 400 is at 3" however when i went to 450 and 500 the group opened up drastically to about 7" from the prior groups that i have shot i feel it should do better. i know that i am not flinching as i had a buddy with me on both occasions. my set up is a stock remmy with an ior 4.5x14 scope warne rings and mark 4 base. shooting 250 SGK reloaded with 89 grains of R19 with a chronyd velocity of 2875fps. i have never shot for groups much beyond 300 yards before but have shot gongs out to 800 with my 308's. I was told that R19 is a bit of a fast burning powder for the caliber and was wondering would it possibly help to change to another? my scope is solid and this same thing has happened to me on the 2 different times i shot. shooting position was over the hood of my truck, gun supported on bags and a rear rest.
sorry for the long explanation but wanted to give you pros all the information i could. thanks.
 
all the information

I'm not a long ranger buy a long shot, (pun intended,) but a target would help immensely. Vertical stringing? The actual velocities on the shots in question would also help.

When you start getting to the longer distances all the elements working against your bullets accuracy get multiplied.

I have only got to 600 yards with acceptable accuracy to kill a deer humanly thus far, so I'm really not one with any answers, but I got questions! ;)
 
Could be velocities, or barrel temp. Some rifles, especially factory barrels will have a tendency to climb with a heated barrel. Quick science lesson, when metal heats up, it expands. This is one of the most common causes of stringing. At longer distance it is more apparent. The reason velocity may be the issue, is that some of your loads may be shooting 20 to 100 fps faster from shot to shot. Obviously the slower shots will tend to shoot low, and the faster rounds climb.

Not sure of your OAL, but try seating them deeper. I have posted on here before about groupings at longer distance. Talking with guys that shoot competitively suggest seating bullets pretty deep for LRH and target. By this I mean seating .080" to .100" away from the lands. Both my cousin and I did this with VLD type bullets and our groups went from 1MOA to just under .5MOA and better if we do our part. This tightened up our velocities, and fliers went away. He has a 338 Lapua shooting 300SMK's. Believe it or not, his load is 50BMG 93.0grn, with a velocity of 2740 with only about a 5fps spread. I think his long barrel really helps in the consistency of burn out of this slow burning powder.

If your current load is shooting well, seating them deeper may hone in your accuracy and tighten up your velocity spread. To eliminate the heat factor, take your time in between shots. I know its tedious, but allow about 3 to 5 minutes between shots after your first 2 shots so that your barrel can stay at a consistent temperature. I have my own speculation, but the hotter the barrel, you can increase case pressure by allowing a casing set to long in a hot chamber. This also increases velocity and causes stringing. Shoot some across a chrony and see what its doing. If you have a large velocity spread, then it you may need to go to a R22, R25, H1000, Retumbo, or Hodgdon or IMR 4831. With the 250's, I would stay with R25, H1000, or the 4831's. Maximum efficiency in a cartridge is between 95% to 100% capacity.

Tank
 
Last edited:
patsygarret, i'm probably the least around here when it comes to long range shooting but I thought I would mention this I shoot off of the hood of my F250 it's a heavy truck but when the winds blowing I can feel it move my truck (this bugs me) . do you notice this while shooting ? just thought i would mention it since your group opened up from moving out just 400 to 450 YRDS . sounds like you have a good load .

Good luck with the shooting...

BigBuck
 
Read and Learn----From HOF Shooter and one of the best builders there is ---- Read #9 10 times:

Tips on Vertical Problems


1. A lot of rifles are muzzle heavy. Some rifles have too heavy a barrel and this causes vertical problems, especially those who shoot free recoil

2. Firing pin coming out of hole in bolt in the cocked position. This will cause poor ignition. Take bolt out of rifle and look in firing pin hole. If you cannot see entire end of firing pin it has come out of the hole.

3. Firing pin dragging in bolt or shroud. Listen to the sound when you dry fire. If not the same sound each shot something is wrong.

4. Trigger sear too much spring. Hold trigger in firing position and push down on sear with your thumb. If it is hard to push down, this will cause vertical problems.

5. Firing pin spring too weak or too strong will cause vertical problems. If you think this is the problem change springs and see what happens.

6. Tightening front sand bag too tight on stock. When you try to pull rifle back by hand and rifle feels like it is stuck in the bag it is too tight. Rifle should move in sand bags evenly, not jerk or chatter when pulling back by hand.

7. Action not level with top of stock running down at muzzle end. Rifle will recoil up at butt end causing vertical.

8. The load that are shooting can too light or heavy and can cause vertical problems.

9. Bench technique not same every shot. One example, should against stock one shot and not the next.

10. Bad primers – if getting vertical try other primers.

11. Bad scope, if scope is bad from shooting vertical, if you change your load in anyway and vertical goes away it is not your scope.

12. Rifle not balanced, it does not recoil right, jumps in bag. If rifle is built properly this will not happen.

13. Some stocks are very flexible. This can cause vertical.

14. Front sandbag too hard. I personally have never had a rifle that will shoot consistent with a rock hard front sandbag. It always causes vertical or other unexplained shots.



Other Tips:

1. Head on front rest loose. A lot of rests have movement even when you tighten them as much as you can. This can cause unexplained shots.

2. Some 30 mm scope rings are not getting tight enough to hold scope. Scope slipping in rings under recoil. This will cause point of aim movement.

3. Keep shell holders clean, in press and priming tool. I have seen so much dirt in shell holders that cases are sized crocked on body. Also primers cutting primer pockets bigger shaving brass as you seat the primer.

4. Whenever you can, set up so you can load watching conditions on the range as you load your ammo. That way you will be aware of any changes in conditions since your last group and you will be mentally prepared for the new condition.

5. Learn to look at whole field of flags, not just the row in front of you. A lot of times conditions change away from you will cause shot to go out of group before change in condition shows up in front of your bench.

6. When you chamfer the inside of your case necks make sure they are smooth enough that they don't peel jacket material off when you seat the bullet.

7. I see people walking around with case necks turned up in the loading block. A lot of the time there is condensation dropping from the roof of your loading area. If one drop of water gets in case you are in trouble on the shot. How many times have you had a bad low shot when it has been raining and you have been walking around with your cases turned up in your block?

8. Learn to keep head down and follow through when you are shooting each shot.

9. I hear a lot of discussion about low shots in a group and apparently this occurs a lot on the fifth shot. If it is your 5th shot most of the time you can bet you are doing something at the bench.

10. If 5th shot is a problem, which everyone does at times, we do what I call wishing the last shot in. We just aim, pull the trigger, and do not worry about the wind flags.

11. This year alone I have seen nine lock rings on scopes that are not tight. Guess what that does to your group? Make sure yours are tight.

12. When you realize that the wind is your friend you will become a much better benchrest shooter.

13. Practice in wind, not in good condition.

14. Pay attention to angle changes on flags. Even though you see the same color angle changes make a big difference in your groups.

15. The longer you wait between shots when a condition is changing the more the condition change will affect your bullet.

16. If you do not know how to read wind flags or have never seen a wind flag try to shoot your group with the flags all going in one direction.

17. Equipment at bench has to work flawlessly. If it doesn't get it fixed or get rid of it. We need all our attention on wind flags.

18. Learn to shoot with both eyes open so you can see more of the conditions.

19. Free recoil shooters should be sure rifle hits shoulder squarely on recoil, not on edge of shoulder or muscle of arm.

20. Should have your own stool to sit on so that you can sit at the bench comfortably for you.

21. Hunting rifle barrels – do not get cleaned enough. If you keep barrel clean it will shoot better for you. You should clean barrel good after every 10 to 12 shots.

22. Most hunting rifles will not put first shot after cleaning with rest of shots. So after cleaning if you have a rifle that won't group first shot shoot one fouling shot before going hunting or before you shoot for group size.

23. When working up a load for your hunting rifle take your time and do not let the barrel get hot on you.
 
I don't have a 338 Lapua but I think your biggest problem is your powder choice. My 300 win mag will not shoot with RE19 with extra capacity and the larger bullets of the Lapua I think your consistency problems are powder.
I did a little looking and it seem you should be using RE25 or some powder of equal burning rate.
I'm sure you can get some 338 shooters to chime in.
Try different powder and let us know how it works.
 
I don't think it is a powder problem,but in my 338 lap's i use RL22 and vvn165 with the 250 grainers and RL25 for the 300smk,i have heard of IOR scopes having problems before,try another scope if you can and just eliminate one thing at a time,good luck hope it works out for you.
 
Warning! This thread is more than 14 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.
Top