M1 NM 30-06 "Go To Load"
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Try 46gr of H/IMR4895 or 47.0gr of IMR4064 +/- .5gr and the Speer 125TNT.
The 45gr mentioned above will probably work OK too. There's a pretty big "sweet spot" around there; especially when it's short range and a big target.
The thing about reduced loads is when compared to "normal" loads they can be pretty slow. For Standing their barrel time means your shot break and follow through need to be better than with a faster load. At greater distances they can get pretty wind sensitive too.
But for 200yd in Sitting and Prone on the SR target you don't need laser beams.
MauryLast edited by Maury Krupp; 05-26-2011, 07:44.Comment
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Here's a test I did with 125 TNT's in my M1. Tested were 48,50, and 52 grains of 4064 powder pushing a 125 grain speer tnt bullet. In an effort to remove variables I shot one 48, then a 50, 52, then back to 48 so barrel temps and fouling would be consistent across the three targets. From a clean cold barrel I shot off two rounds at the gong just to foul the barrel then shot the targets. Interestingly the first three shots were very low across all three powder charges. After that the 48 looked like patterning a shotgun, but the 50's and 52's started grouping well. The 8 ring shot at 12:30 on the middle target was called off. Later shots with the 50 and 52 grouped more to the left than the earlier shots, this is more clearly shown in the right target with the group of five first, then the group of four. The last few rounds gave me some difficulty from mirage off the barrel so that could have affected my aiming point. I loaded some 168's to use as a control group but didn't have the target space for a fourth target and ran out of light so I couldn't shoot them at the end. The day before I shot 47's that looked like the 48's and 46's that had a group two inches wide and 12" tall, the worst vertical stringing I've ever experienced.Try 46gr of H/IMR4895 or 47.0gr of IMR4064 +/- .5gr and the Speer 125TNT.
The 45gr mentioned above will probably work OK too. There's a pretty big "sweet spot" around there; especially when it's short range and a big target.
The thing about reduced loads is when compared to "normal" loads they can be pretty slow. For Standing their barrel time means your shot break and follow through need to be better than with a faster load. At greater distances they can get pretty wind sensitive too.
But for 200yd in Sitting and Prone on the SR target you don't need laser beams.
Maury

8 shot clip of 52 grains taking more time and letting the barrel cool.

At 52 grains I didn't feel like the recoil was any less than a 168 so I quit fooling with light bullets for now.Phillip McGregor (OFC)
"I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthurComment
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Phil,
What you saw is what I normally see with reduced light bullet loads. They're easy to shoot but don't group tight enough for anything but the normal SR targets. Bump up the powder charge and they group tighter but you lose the advantage of reduced recoil.
That's why I only use them for Sitting or Games.
The 100yd Smallbore target you used has scoring rings around 2/3 the size of the SR-1. A group that barely holds the 9-ring on that target would be clean (or close to it) on the SR-1.
Some of the vertical stringing may be due to powder position. There's a lot of empty space in a .30-'06; even with 4064.
MauryComment
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OK, new update: Most recent published data I have found states the 46gr of IMR 4895 is with civilian brass; the NRA M1 data says reduce by 2gr for milsurp brass. So, 44gr of IMR4895 behind M118 bullets in USGI M72 brass with Winchester LR primers looks like the way to go; checked with Sierra (going to 175SMKs when the 118s run out) and 46 is a near-max load for the M1 data they have. I'd also think that the lower handload might make finding brass somewhat easier. Questions:
1) Will setting my reloading dies with a loaded FA 1960 M72 round get me where I need to be for OAL/cartridge headspace, or do I need a cartridge headspace gauge?
2) Has anybody used a load with what I will be using at 600? That's what these are for; to start with for zero, I intend to use the standard comeup from my 300 zero.Chattanooga Strong.
The Krag Rifle: The Hamilton Watch of milsurp!Comment
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"OK, new update: Most recent published data I have found states the 46gr of IMR 4895 is with civilian brass; the NRA M1 data says reduce by 2gr for milsurp brass."
All my brass is USGI or HXP and I've never had a problem with 46.0 IMR4895.
"So, 44gr of IMR4895 behind M118 bullets in USGI M72 brass with Winchester LR primers looks like the way to go;"
If you can get the desired velocity (~2640-2700fps). It takes 46.0gr for me.
"...checked with Sierra (going to 175SMKs when the 118s run out) and 46 is a near-max load for the M1 data they have."
Sierra is known for listing the lowest load data out there. Cross-check against a couple other sources, test for pressure signs and desired velocity, then decide.
"1)...do I need a cartridge headspace gauge?"
Yes.
"2) Has anybody used a load with what I will be using at 600? That's what these are for; to start with for zero, I intend to use the standard comeup from my 300 zero."
If you load it to a velocity of 2640fps at 78ft from the muzzle, thousands of people have shot millions of rounds of it; it's a clone of M72 Match. The standard comeup will get you in the black; refine for your conditions and hold.
MauryLast edited by Maury Krupp; 05-28-2011, 02:05.Comment
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Interesting... IMR says 46gr is a starting load with 175s, NRA says 46gr is with civilian brass and to reduce by 2gr with military brass. This is confusing; I really wish M72 was not nearly $1/round...
Moving on, though, I do see a number of people talk about the cartridge headspace gage. What will it do that setting up my dies using a loaded round of M72 won't do? If the rounds are full-length sized, won't they fit *any* .30-06 chamber?Chattanooga Strong.
The Krag Rifle: The Hamilton Watch of milsurp!Comment
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The "conventional wisdom" of reducing the powder charge is based on the idea that GI brass is heavier/has thicker walls and therefore less internal volume.
After weighing random commercial and GI cases empty and full of water, I haven't found that to be true. Both types of cases held comparable amounts of water.
The "conventional wisdom" may have been true at one time but as near as I can tell it doesn't seem to be today.
Still, it's always prudent to start a couple grains below the intended charge and work up just for safety's sake.
I'm not clear on how you intend to set up your sizing die with an already loaded round?
Full-length resizing isn't really the issue anyway; it's cartridge headspace (ie, where is the shoulder?).
A case re-sized (ie, shoulder pushed back) to SAAMI minimum should fit into the chamber of any rifle with a headspace between the SAAMI min and max spec for that chambering.
If the rifle headspace is at min and the case shoulder is at max it may not fit. That's a recipie for stoppages (failure to feed, failure to fire, failure to extract) and even worse, a possible slamfire.
There are two types of case headspace gauges: One type of case gauge measures the actual shoulder position; the other is a simple drop-in min-max "GO-NO GO"
Some reloaders resize to just under the headspace of a specific rifle to reduce stretching and prolong case life. You need a gauge that measures to do this.
Others resize to min to make the ammo usable in any rifle. The drop-in will work for that.
Either way you must ensure the case will fully enter the chamber and the bolt can go fully into battery.
MauryComment
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Makes sense about headspace gages; in 10+ years of reloading I have had one Krag round that would not chamber; while annoying in a boltgun, could be disasterous in a gasgun. Thanks for the info, Maury. I figure IMR is the data to go with and they have 46 of IMR-4895 as a starting load with 175 SMKs. If that works well enough (i.e. works the bolt and is good for 150+ at 600 which is about what I scored last time I shot M72 [had gun trouble]), I am done with load development (for now). At this point in my shooting career, I will be better served by getting out and shooting the Course rather than spending who knows how long tweaking handloads.
Other question: Is there any reason to go with one brand of gage over another?Last edited by Plain Old Dave; 05-28-2011, 05:37.Chattanooga Strong.
The Krag Rifle: The Hamilton Watch of milsurp!Comment
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Wilson gages are pretty dern good, & fairly in-expensive. Have them in .308Win, .30-06, .243Win, .223 Rem. Figure they'll out last me by far. Remember to clean ALL case lube off the brass each time before inserting them into a headspace gage.be safe, enjoy life, journey well
da gimp
OFC, Mo. ChapterComment
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I like my rcbs. If you are serious about resizing to the minimum spec, remove the gas lock screw for your reference cases else the violent extraction stretches them. This phenomenon led me to believe I had too much headspace when I first got the rcbs case mic.Makes sense about headspace gages; in 10+ years of reloading I have had one Krag round that would not chamber; while annoying in a boltgun, could be disasterous in a gasgun. Thanks for the info, Maury. I figure IMR is the data to go with and they have 46 of IMR-4895 as a starting load with 175 SMKs. If that works well enough (i.e. works the bolt and is good for 150+ at 600 which is about what I scored last time I shot M72 [had gun trouble]), I am done with load development (for now). At this point in my shooting career, I will be better served by getting out and shooting the Course rather than spending who knows how long tweaking handloads.
Other question: Is there any reason to go with one brand of gage over another?Phillip McGregor (OFC)
"I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthurComment

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