Ski_Doctor wrote:I didn't consider the crimp in the equation and you might be onto something. I did do a slight change up from the HP-38 and PP loads but thought I got the crimp back to where it should have been. Maybe that's enough to cause the wierdness In Accuracy. I do have a crono but didn't take it with to the range (my bad).
Sam - thanks for the Nosler data. I have two books plus usually a cross check from a third source, and there is a little variance. The Nosler data is certainly higher than the others by a fair shake. I wasn't showing any signs of over pressure at my max load (~6.2) and that would be smack in mid range according to your Nosler data.
I guess I have a little more homework to do with this powder.
Hate to disagree, but there is NO more homework to do with this powder itself. It's in multiple manuals, it's been a staple of pistol reloading for decades, and people load the stuff in 9mm all the time. The problem here is that YOUR reloading setup is messed up in some way, either with measuring out the powder or the crimp or something else. It's relatively easy to screw things up with the crimp as a rookie, so that's the most likely candidate.
I'm going to guess here, and I think you are probably trying to seat the bullet AND crimp it with the seating die. Am I right?? This is nearly impossible for a n00b to get right in less than 5 tries, and I have described the process in several posts in here, so you can search for it. SO: You have met the enemy, and he is you... start getting acquainted...
Oh, and also time to wake up and smell the coffee about the "sweet spot": With handgun reloading, the sweet spot is a complete MYTH unless you're shooting with the gun clamped in a Ransom Machine rest and also have a chrono. 95% of ALL handgun reloading accuracy is based on the tightness of the loose nut behind the trigger. Tightest group I EVER shot with my 9mm Browning was some really crappy handloads, and I was just trying to burn off the ammo to get the precious cases back. Did a 10 round mag dump about as fast as I could while I was pretending to aim, and wound up with a 7 shot group the size of a nickel and the other 3 shots nearby.
Sweet spot is VERY real provided you're shooting a 6mm PPC or a 6.5 Creedmore or a lot of other rifle calibers. With a normal handgun, it's a COMPLETE fantasy, as least as far as measuring it by group size. You can pick up the most CONSISTENT load by the picking the string with the lowest standard deviation of the velocity, but there is NO way to prove it with the bullets spread on paper if you're shooting offhand.