Which brings us back to one of my original questions and the title of this thread. I've two 124 gr bullets, both from RMR, one a FMJ (brass) RN and the other a FMJ truncated cone. When your specific bullet make/model isn't listed what is the approach?
Comparable bullets are selected by sheath material and weight.
In your case any 124gr jacketed bullet. In this case there are several 124gr bullets referenced in the official VV load data, 3 of which are the the same COL as I'm using, of these two are listing max load of 4.3 and one is 4.0. I chose the 4.0 as max for no other reason than it was the safest choice.
They don't need to be the same OAL, but it helps. The real criteria is bullet seating depth (actually volume inside the case and under the bullet), which is determined by OAL
and bullet length...
not merely OAL by itself. This is why we keep a list of bullet lengths.
After all that, beginning at the
Starting Load takes out all the other variables.
I'm intending on taking this 124gr FMJ RN to 4.3 by way of 4.1, 4.2 , 4.3gr while watching speed as my benchmark for over pressurization. The only reason I'm doing this is because the charge weights I've tested (3.4 through 4.0 in .01 steps) are inaccurate rounds on target. I'm 100% chasing accuracy and would just as well not have to run up to max to find it but with this bullet, powder, gun combination it appears I may have to.
OK, good.
Then I did misunderstand. My apologies. But I don't think there's going to be anything there. Try your next slower powder or N330.
Watching my speeds means that I'm using the speeds of the max charge weights listed by VV for the 3 with the same COL which are 1066, 1070, 1096. Staying on the low side I'm using 1070, which as stated on their chart is for a 4" barrel.
I totally agree with that. Which is why I don't think you'll see any higher speeds.
I only shoot 4" barrels, so I've never looked for listed barrel lengths in the VV manual. I assumed 16" test barrels.
Using Ballistics buy the inch as a resource it appears there is a delta of about 180fps between a 4" and 16" barrel with 9mm 124gr rounds. So 1070 + 180 = 1250 this is a *calculated* max speed.
OK I believe you. But I have no experience in this area.
In the ladder I've loaded and shot thus far (3.4 to 4.0) the typical fps jump per .01 increase of charge weight was 25+/-. Again I was running 5 round steps so it's solid data. Anyway my maximum load thus far, at 4.0 yielded 1109 fps. If the fps steps remain somewhat consistent at 25 fps per 0.1 and I'm going up 0.3gr it would equal a 75 fps increase over the established 1109 or... 1181. At 1181 this would seem to be in the safe zone in relationship to the 1250 *calculated* max. I'd likely pull the plug a bit over 1200 anyway if it goes that high.
0.1gr not .01
You are assuming a simple straight line growth with your 75fps, and it is not. You are also assuming that
Velocity and
Pressure always advance 1:1, which doesn't always happen at the high end of the load. You need to become super aware of other signs of pressure, and watch for Velocity becoming asymptotic rather than continuing to climb as expected. This cartoon tries to explain...

The 1:1 relationship is
true within the (green) safe loading zone. But
Velocity seems to fall off above that, while
Chamber Pressure zooms upward, faster and faster. You can really get in trouble fast chasing that "calculated" 10fps bullet velocity that never quite materializes.
And this pitfall typically happens sooner with "faster powders". However, I suspect that's usually with fast double-base powders due to the unstable nature of nitroglycerin content. I have no idea if you are safer because N320 is single-base. I'm not a chemist or a ballistics expert. This is knowledge that I have pieced together. So I have no way to guide you.
@ wobbly, if you tell me my logic on this is bad or sketchy I will 100% respect that. I'm totally willing to accept that this powder, bullet, gun combo might be a dud, I'm only trying to learn as I go.
That's where we all are, my friend. You simply have a material combination that falls outside my area of study.
