I agree with Max, there is nothing special about Sciroccos, reload for them like any bullet. I have shot several hundred in .30 and 7mm and never had any problem finding accuracy in my rifles. My friend loads H-4350 in his 7mm mag, perhaps give it a try. I would also try 4831. The Swift manual recommends the following powders:
Hodgdon
H-1000 68.4 - 73.5 grains
H-4350 57.7 - 62.0 grains
H-4831 62.8 - 67.5 grains
Alliant
RL-19 60.9 - 65.5 grains
RL-22 63.7 - 68.5 grains
RL-25 67.0 - 72.0 grains
IMR
IMR-4350 57.7 - 62.0 grains
IMR-4831 59.5 - 64.0 grains
IMR-7828 61.8 - 66.5 grains
RL-19 had the lowest SD for their particular ten round test, that doesn't mean much for your rifle. I double checked the above typing, the numbers are straight from the Swift book and correct.
Given that the bullet is going to sit down into the body of the case a bit because of the short neck and long bullet length, you might be wise to start with 4350 (either type) since you won't be compressing so much.
I just got a rifle ready for a hunt and shot three sub half minute groups with the 165 Scirocco in .30 cal. That kind of accuracy gives a person a lot of confidence.
We have recovered a lot of Sciroccos from game and test medium and they seem to average just over 80% with very good frontal diameters (mushrooms). Bullet performance is very consistent, one of the best all-around hunting bullets available.
I don't know if you want to bother but I always segregate my bullets by 1/10ths and load them in bunches that don't vary more than three tenths. As they got the Scirocco production going this became less significant as the bullet to bullet uniformity has greatly increased. I still do it tho, and get excellent accuracy with these bullets.
Seems that I find some wonky bullets from most boxes of bullets that I check from all brands (maybe up to a grain off the average, sometimes as high as three grains).
Fact is that this is not a big deal, I just shot some of the cull bullets from my 165 Sciroccos and they still grouped inside an inch. I guess this is another confidence thing, knowing that your loads don't have any bullets with large weight variances. We don't weigh match bullets, that is a waste of time.