apache12 Report post Posted May 25, 2015 I have a buddy who says I can use his reloaded to work up some loads for my 270 I was wondering if anyone has a recipe they would share. I didn't know if that was the sort of thing that people share or not? I have a weatherby vanguard 24 inch barrel. Looking for 130 grain and would use a bullet for mule or coues. I usually zero to at 200. I wouldn't shoot past 500 yards Thx Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MULEPACKHUNTER Report post Posted May 25, 2015 I happen to be trying the hodgdon superformance on my dads 270 and I am running 130 grn vld with 53.5 grns. Shot very well out of a 26 in barrel. 2900 fps if I remember right. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mike S Report post Posted May 25, 2015 Reloder 22 and a 130 Hornady at 3000 fps worked great out of my 22" M70 barrel. 500 yard group shown... 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sherman Report post Posted May 25, 2015 Here is mine for a remington 700 24" barrel remington brass fully sized cci 200 primers IMR 4831 54.5 gr Hornandy 130 gr sst or 130 gr sp I have used these in 5 or 6 weapons and all about the same results even some auto loaders Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lancetkenyon Report post Posted May 25, 2015 All loads from a 24" barrel Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 54.8 grains IMR 4350 130 Sierra Game King 3120 fps @ 3/4 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 55 grains IMR4831 150 Barnes TSX FB 2950 fps @ 1 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 58.3 grains H4831 140 Berger HVLD 3090 fps @ 3/4 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI BR-2 Match primer 57.8 grains H4831SC 150 Nosler Accubond LR 2909 fps @ .5 MOA 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Zeke-BE Report post Posted May 25, 2015 Tikka .270 Nosler Brass W760 52 grains 3000 fps 140 grain Nosler accubond .5 MOA This shot was 750 yards. 400 yards is easy and I'm zeroed in at 300. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
STOMP442 Report post Posted May 25, 2015 54.0gr of H4350 and a 130gr bullet has worked in every 270 I have ever tried it in. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
roninflag Report post Posted May 26, 2015 I would load a 130 berger for coues. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
.270 Report post Posted May 26, 2015 i use a 140 gr hornady btsp innerlok with H-4350 powder. always works for me. other than copper bullets, there really ain't a bad load for a .270. Lark. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
murfys69law Report post Posted May 26, 2015 All loads from a 24" barrel Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 54.8 grains IMR 4350 130 Sierra Game King 3120 fps @ 3/4 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 55 grains IMR4831 150 Barnes TSX FB 2950 fps @ 1 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI 200 LR primer 58.3 grains H4831 140 Berger HVLD 3090 fps @ 3/4 MOA Winchester brass (fully prepped) CCI BR-2 Match primer 57.8 grains H4831SC 150 Nosler Accubond LR 2909 fps @ .5 MOA Agree with lance. Any of those loads are good ones to try. Just remember...every gun shoots dif. If you notice tho the Accubond is his most accurate. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
firstcoueswas80 Report post Posted May 26, 2015 Accubond + H4831 and you're set. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CouesWhitetail Report post Posted May 26, 2015 130 hornady boat tail spire point or SST 55.5 gr H4350 I found the BTSP bullet super accurate and the SST less so, but wow the knock-down power of the SST is truly impressive. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
apache12 Report post Posted May 27, 2015 Thanks for all the help. I certainly have some fun ahead of me One more question Should I shoot five then drag a snake through and let rifle totally cool and shoot five more of different load My 270 seems to walk a bit as it gets warm. Even with bedded action and floated barrel Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lancetkenyon Report post Posted May 27, 2015 Ladder test once you figure out what projectile and powder combo you want to shoot. Shoot slow enough your barrel does not heat up. Sounds like you have a light contour barrel if it starts walking at 5 rounds. Load one of each charge weight from low to 2 grains above max in .5 grain increments. Go to 400 yards and shoot at the same point of aim. You will have 2 nodes (group of 2 to 3 that group together vertically), one low and one high. Stop as soon as you see any signs of pressure. That could be a middle load to above max, only your gun can tell what is too hot for it. Then take those two nodes and start .2 grains below and go in .2 grain increments to .2 grains above. Load 3-5 each and go shoot at 100 yards for groups. Best group is your load. Then play with seating depth to really fine tune. 400 yard ladder test should look something like this. Shots 1-3 (40.5, 41.0, 41.5 grains) are the low node, shots 6-8 (43.0, 43.5, 44.0 grains) are the high node. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MULEPACKHUNTER Report post Posted May 27, 2015 I shoot 3 and let it cool on sporter barrel but on a heavier barrel 5 is good. Mine walks a bit as well after 4 rounds Share this post Link to post Share on other sites