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  1. Default .308 bolt gun cast mid-range load.

    I have some IMR 4198 and would like to work up a cast load for 100-200 yard reduced targets. Any recommendations?

  2. #2
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    Most cast loads involve handgun powders, not IMR4198. Produces too much velocity.
    What bullet weight?
    Spelling and grammar count!

  3. #3
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    I tried some cast in a K98. I couldn't get any accuracy while keeping under 1600 FPS and I had no gas checks.

  4. #4
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    I tried some cast in a K98. I couldn't get any accuracy while keeping under 1600 FPS and I had no gas checks.

  5. #5
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    Cast Bullet Basics For Military Surplus Rifles
    By C.E. Harris Rev. 9-6-93
    . . .
    3. 150-180-gr. gaschecked "200-yard target"
    1500-1600 f.p.s., 16 grs. of #2400 or equivalent.
    . . .
    My favorite load is the most accurate, Mattern's so-called "200-
    yard target load". I expect 10-shot groups at 200 yards, firing
    prone rapid with sling to average 4-5". I shoot high-
    Sharpshooter/low-Expert scores across the course with an issue
    03A3 or M1917, shooting in a cloth coat, using my cast bullet
    loads. The power of this load approximates the .32-40,
    inadequate for deer by today's standards.

    Mattern's "200-yard target load" is easy to assemble. Because it
    is a mild load, soft scrap alloys usually give better accuracy
    than harder ones such as linotype. Local military collector-
    shooters have standardized on 16 grains of #2400 as the
    "universal" prescription. It gives around 1500 f.p.s. with a
    150-180-gr. cast bullet in almost any military caliber. We use
    16 grains of #2400 as our reference standard, just as highpower
    competitors use 168 Sierra MatchKings and 4895.
    . . .
    Sixteen Grains of #2400 Is The Universal Load

    The same 16 grain charge of #2400 is universal for all calibers
    as a starting load. It is mild and accurate in any larger
    military case from a .30-40 Krag or .303 British up through a
    .30-'06 or 7.9x57, with standard-weight bullets of suitable
    diameter for the caliber. This is my recommendation for anybody
    trying cast bullet loads for the first time in a military rifle
    without prior load development. I say this because #2400 is
    not position sensitive, requires no fiber fillers to ensure
    uniform ignition, and actually groups better when you just
    stripper-clip load the rifle and bang them off, rather than
    tipping the muzzle up to position the charge.

    Similar ballistics can be obtained with other powders in any case
    from 7.62x39 to .30-'06 size. If you don't have Hercules #2400
    you can freely substitute
    17 grains of IMR or H4227, 18 grs. of
    4198,
    21 grs. of Reloder 7, 24 grs. of IMR3031, or 25.5 grs. of
    4895 for comparable results. However, these other powders may
    give some vertical stringing in cases larger than the 7.62x39
    unless the charge is positioned against the primer by tipping the
    muzzle up before firing. Hercules #2400 does not require this
    precaution
    . Don't ask me why. Hercules #2400 usually gives
    tight clusters only within a narrow range of charge weights
    within a grain or so, and the "universal" 16 grain load is almost
    always best. Believe me, we have spent alot of time trying to
    improve on this, and you can take our word for it.

    The beauty of the "200-yard target load" at about 1500 f.p.s. is
    that it can be assembled with bullets cast from the cheapest
    inexpensive scrap alloy, and fired all day without having to
    clean the bore. It ALWAYS works. Leading is never a problem.
    Once a uniform bore condition is established, the rifle behaves
    like a .22 match rifle, perhaps needing a warming shot or two if
    it has cooled, but otherwise being remarkably consistent. The
    only thing I do after a day's shoot is to swab the bore with a
    couple of wet patches of GI bore cleaner or Hoppe's, and let it
    soak until the next match. I then follow with three dry patches
    prior to firing. It only takes about three foulers to get the
    03A3 to settle into tight little clusters again.
    . . .

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