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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
New To Reloading .308 Win
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<blockquote data-quote="Grumulkin" data-source="post: 462139" data-attributes="member: 29281"><p>What I think is that you're too worried about velocity. Though I have a chronograph, I don't even check velocity during load workup. My number one criteria for a good load is accuracy.</p><p></p><p>With ballistics software, available free on huntingnut.com, you can get a ballpark estimate on velocity. What you do is sight your gun in at 100 yards or some other range, enter the ballistic coefficient of the bullet, elevation, temperature, etc. and then play around with velocity numbers until the trajectory about matches what you're getting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Grumulkin, post: 462139, member: 29281"] What I think is that you're too worried about velocity. Though I have a chronograph, I don't even check velocity during load workup. My number one criteria for a good load is accuracy. With ballistics software, available free on huntingnut.com, you can get a ballpark estimate on velocity. What you do is sight your gun in at 100 yards or some other range, enter the ballistic coefficient of the bullet, elevation, temperature, etc. and then play around with velocity numbers until the trajectory about matches what you're getting. [/QUOTE]
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New To Reloading .308 Win
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