As usual, for the recent IA State Championships (IBS Registered Group event), I opted to try something a little different - for the HV 100/200/Grand: I screwed a Broughton 1:8"(5C) 6MM barrel ( actual twist is closer to 1:8.5") onto the [Borden TURED] Time Precision HV rig and worked up decent loads using the 121 Gr. and 116 Gr. 6MM FB bullets, propelled by hefty charge weights of the "new" IMR 4007 - oh, the 6MM DASHER chamber was cut by pal, Mike Bigelow. After little tinkering, both bullets showed substantial potential. To minimize recoil and pressures, I opted to shoot the 116 Gr. FB (G1 BC of about .53) at a chronographed MV 2830 FPS - at this velocity, the calculated 100 Yd. wind-drift is right at 0.060" per mile per hour of perpendicular cross-wind; at 200 Yd., this figure jumps to about 0.25" per MPH of wind velocity. For comparison, in the same wind condition, my beloved 118 Gr., 10 ogive thirty caliber bullet, at a MV of 3050 FPS, will drift, respectively, 0.08" and 0.380" ! The math drives me nutz . . . the other 17 shooters were shootin' either 6PPCs, .22 Waldogs, or, 6MM Beggs - one of the Beggs shooters, Terry Meyer, despite grumbling about "tight cases" all day (during the LV stage), managed to win the 200 and the Lv GRAND AGG - his is a turned neck version . . .
But, back to the DASHER combo . . . despite seating the bullet bases almost to the shoulder/body junction, and the fast twist, and bullets with, "too much bearing surface", and HEAVILY COMPRESSED powder charge, the rig managed to post one of the only two aggs, "in the twos" at 100, placing second. The 100 Yd. performance was followed by another first loser trophy at 200 Yd, where every group was trying to be a sub 1/2" deal - garn ! This, on a THOUGH day (sustained winds in excess of 25MPH and up to much higher), the HV/DASHER/Heavy Bullet combo was one of only two rifles which kept all five [200 Yd.] groups under 1.0" . . so, is there anything to it? Oh, I shot "moly coated" bullets throughout the HV without cleaning the barrel - this Broughton is a KEEPER! ;)
Oh, there were ZERO bullet failures (moving backers, don't ya know) and ZERO signs of bullet failure (over 100 rounds without cleaning and every bullet-hole was nice and round, with NO lead spray) - the reasons: 1) the 24" barrel, which, compared to the typical 28-30" barrels, reduces FRICTION (HEAT) to , respectively, 85% & 80%, while sacrificing only about 8FPS per inch of barrel; 2) even more friction reduction due to the molybdenum-disulfide coating; 3) the "odd" (unopposed) land/groove configuration of the 5-groove barrel.
I think there is promise - the winner is a very good shooter - Jim Carstensen - who would be expected to finish ahead of me 99% of the time: Jim shot extremely well ! However, I believe that had he been shooting my combination (equally as well as he managed his 6PPC), he would have knocked roughly .3" off each of his [200 Yd.] groups - yes, I believe the BC was "giving me" that much on my BEST groups and, as compared to my neighbors, saving me at least 0.5" on my mistakes ! As David Letterman asks . . . " Is this anything? ;) RG