![]() Consider the following: (I would stick to the first 2 on this list since I've had best results with them personally and are plentiful now. Powders are numerous, and many will work well. It was pointed downrange but still I had to change my pants. I would not trust a match primer on a floating firing pin weapon (AR's) because I've had a slam fire a few years ago chambering a round. They are good quality primers and I've been told are actually a magnum primer. I would stick to CCI #41 Military primers on any AR. Which primer do you use / recommend? (CCI 41/400/450, other?) Also, Federal Gold Medal AR Match primer (GM205MAR) is nowhere to be found. I will get some of those bullets and give it a try.Ībssocold: Would you mind sharing your load info? I would like to try that as a starting point. It would be great if I can replicate that round. My rifle loves Black Hills! (If I recall correctly, that's what Noveske uses to tune their rifles at factory). My Noveske 10.5" SBR has a 1:7 twist barrel so no issues there. One for matches/plinking and a defensive round (Which looks I can develop a single one that serves both purposes). To answer some of your questions, I would like to develop two rounds. I need more room to shoot near northeast Florida, someone help me out for the info. My favorite load right now is 77gr STMK's with Alliant AR-Comp, this through an 18" Wilson stainless barrel with rifle-length gas, Wylde chamber and 1:8 twist. Powder choices are even more fun as there are a lot of powders that work well but you'll need to pick a bullet and bullet weight first. ![]() Bullet choices will depend on your intended use, your rifle's twist rate and how much you're willing to spend. Not as good as a soft point bonded but very nice for a match round.īack to the original poster's question. The ballistic tip helps promote expansion as well, the few gel tests I've seen so far look very promising. 372 while the new STMK tipped version has a BC of .420 so they'll be the new holy grail of precision AR shooting. Sierra just released a 77gr Matchking with a polymer ballistic tip. It's the 1:9's that will see stability issues with 77's. This powder is sifted clean and ready to load.ĥ0 lb containers- $400 ($8 per lb) (about 150 lbs remaining).A 1:8 will usually handle 77's just fine. This means the published load data for Alliant 2000 MR would need to be reduced slightly from the published powder charges (maybe a grain or two) while still getting the faster speeds this powder is known for. This lot of powder is known as the "faster burn" powder, so it will burn slightly faster than the normal Alliant 2000 MR powder. When ordering thousands of pounds, you can cater the burn rate a little slower or faster. ![]() This is their "faster burn" SMP 763 powder. This powder is reclaimed powder from previously loaded ammo from a large ammo company. It is a temp stable, spherical/ball powder perfect for 223/5.56 and 308 Win burn rates. Marks SMP 763 is known as Alliant Power Pro 2000 MR on the retail side (Alliant website of Power Pro 2000 MR powder). 1850+ lbs available, all same lot.ģ3 lb sealed container- $900 ($27 per lb)ģ) As of 12/27- 150+ lbs remaining. For the 8 lb kegs, I will pour them into a factory 8 lb powder keg, weighed out within. ![]() The powder is packaged in new, sealed, 33 lb commercial powder containers. This powder is a temp stable, very small extruded powder and will meter well through progressive machines. This powder is one of the best 223/5.56 and 308 Win powders (plus many other cartridges). (No PayPal, Zelle, or etc.)Ģ) Hodgdon Benchmark powder. If paying via credit card, add Texas sales tax and 2% credit card fee. Currently, this is all I have to offer for powder and primers. Please email me for pick up address and product information. Again, it is for LOCAL PICK UP ONLY, I can not ship. These will be available for purchase starting Monday, 12/13, for LOCAL PICK UP ONLY in Carrollton, TX.
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