.30-30 loads, going back to square one
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.30-30 loads, going back to square one
I've decided to take my .30-30 back to square one. I've got a new sight on it, have had some trigger work done, and I feel it's time to start over, and see what I get. Rifle is a 1957 Winchester 94 Carbine, to which I've recently added a William's FP. Rifling is in good shape, but there is some pitting in the grooves, and on one of the lands, that I can see towards the muzzle. Even with less than perfect bore I've gotten nice groups out of this rifle in the past.
So, I'm going to start with brand new Winchester brass, trimmed to the same length, primer pockets uniformed, and flash holes deburred.
I have Federal Large Rifle primers on hand, regular and match. Should I just use the regular ones?
Bullets, I've got Hornady and Speer 150 gr, and Hornady, Remington, & Sierra 170 gr.
Suitable .30-30 powders I have on hand with data for both bullet weights: Reloders 7 & 15, W760, BL-C(2), Varget, H4895, and IMR3031.
Plan is to load up three rounds for each bullet, using the same powder in each, starting at that powder's start load. Example, the two 150 gr. bullets would start with 31 gr. of Varget, and all three of the 170 gr. bullets would start with 29.5 gr. of Varget.
I would shoot three shots for group over a chronograph, clean the gun, then shoot the next load, and repeat.
So, is my plan sound? What powder should I start with? I'm looking at 3031, BL-C(2), or Varget. How long should I stick with bullet as I increase powder charge before I say "Okay, this is NOT the bullet for this gun"?
Thanks,
~Michael
So, I'm going to start with brand new Winchester brass, trimmed to the same length, primer pockets uniformed, and flash holes deburred.
I have Federal Large Rifle primers on hand, regular and match. Should I just use the regular ones?
Bullets, I've got Hornady and Speer 150 gr, and Hornady, Remington, & Sierra 170 gr.
Suitable .30-30 powders I have on hand with data for both bullet weights: Reloders 7 & 15, W760, BL-C(2), Varget, H4895, and IMR3031.
Plan is to load up three rounds for each bullet, using the same powder in each, starting at that powder's start load. Example, the two 150 gr. bullets would start with 31 gr. of Varget, and all three of the 170 gr. bullets would start with 29.5 gr. of Varget.
I would shoot three shots for group over a chronograph, clean the gun, then shoot the next load, and repeat.
So, is my plan sound? What powder should I start with? I'm looking at 3031, BL-C(2), or Varget. How long should I stick with bullet as I increase powder charge before I say "Okay, this is NOT the bullet for this gun"?
Thanks,
~Michael
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
You can play with loads all you want but just use the non-magnum large rifle primers, 29-30 gr. IMR-3031 and the Remington or Sierra 170 gr. bullets. Works a treat in all my .30-30s.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
What Hobie said. In all probability you'll settle on around 29-30 grains of 3031 like a huge amount of 30-30 shooters do. It's hard to beat around 32 grains of 748 as well. I myself have never used 760 in my 30-30's. Reloder 7 gives good velocities. Don't know about the rest of your powders. Good luck. 

Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
I'd be more interested in shooting groups for best accuracy than shooting them over the chrono.
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Will be shooting for accuracy, and will be check velocity at the same time.86er wrote:I'd be more interested in shooting groups for best accuracy than shooting them over the chrono.
Well, looks like I'll start with 3031.
~Michael
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Well, 3031 under the 170 gr. Remington Core Lokt has been poor at best. 3031 under the 170 gr. Hornady was a little better. 150 gr. Hornady over Reloder 7 opened my eyes today, four out of five shots into 3/4" at 50 yards. The fourth shot was thrown well outta the group thanks to me. I know the Speer 150 gr shoots well in this gun, will try it with Reloder 7 also.Slick13 wrote:Will be shooting for accuracy, and will be check velocity at the same time.86er wrote:I'd be more interested in shooting groups for best accuracy than shooting them over the chrono.
Well, looks like I'll start with 3031.
~Michael
~Michael
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
I've tried the IMR 3031 and 4895 with decent results. Win 760 is a bit too slow. BL-C(2) and Varget are good powders from what I've read. Although I've not used them.
My best most consistent load for all the 30-30s I've owned has been the following:
Cases: preferably Winchester, but sometimes whatever was handy
Primers: usually Winchester LR, but I've also used Fed, Rem, and CCI with decent results
Powder: Winchester 748, 34.5grs. This is straight from the Winchester loading book
Bullet: Speer, Hornady, Sierra, and now Winchester 150gr. The bullets only seem to matter to individual rifles. It doesn't seem to matter to the overall consistency of the load.
This load is as consistent as it gets. It is my go to load and I've never been disappointed in it.
Joe
My best most consistent load for all the 30-30s I've owned has been the following:
Cases: preferably Winchester, but sometimes whatever was handy
Primers: usually Winchester LR, but I've also used Fed, Rem, and CCI with decent results
Powder: Winchester 748, 34.5grs. This is straight from the Winchester loading book
Bullet: Speer, Hornady, Sierra, and now Winchester 150gr. The bullets only seem to matter to individual rifles. It doesn't seem to matter to the overall consistency of the load.
This load is as consistent as it gets. It is my go to load and I've never been disappointed in it.
Joe
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.***

Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
That is interesting. IMR 3031 has never failed to produce 1.5-2" groups at 100 yards for me. I've got 3 .30-30s right now that all shoot into 1.5" or a little less with the same load of 30 gr. IMR 3031 under just about any 170 gr. ".30-30" bullet bit it Hornady, Speer, Remington, Winchester PP or ST, or Sierra (.307" or .308"). I full-length resize all cases and use CCI 200 primers.Slick13 wrote:Well, 3031 under the 170 gr. Remington Core Lokt has been poor at best. 3031 under the 170 gr. Hornady was a little better. 150 gr. Hornady over Reloder 7 opened my eyes today, four out of five shots into 3/4" at 50 yards. The fourth shot was thrown well outta the group thanks to me. I know the Speer 150 gr shoots well in this gun, will try it with Reloder 7 also.Slick13 wrote:Will be shooting for accuracy, and will be check velocity at the same time.86er wrote:I'd be more interested in shooting groups for best accuracy than shooting them over the chrono.
Well, looks like I'll start with 3031.
~Michael
~Michael
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Just a word of caution if you use the 170 grain Hornadys. 28.5 grains of 3031 is a max load for a couple of my Winchesters. The Hornady manual lists that same load as a max. Some guys have no problem, but My rifles were starting to show pressure signs with 29 grains.
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
I started with 28.7 grains of 3031 under the 170 gr. Rem and saw no signs of pressure, same at 29.5 (over the max listed on Hodgdon's website). Chrono is out of commission, but from the POI I'm assuming velocities were low. Same with 29 gr. under the 170 Hornady, primers looked fine and from the POI I assume velocites were low (1950 to 2000 fps).Bigahh wrote:Just a word of caution if you use the 170 grain Hornadys. 28.5 grains of 3031 is a max load for a couple of my Winchesters. The Hornady manual lists that same load as a max. Some guys have no problem, but My rifles were starting to show pressure signs with 29 grains.
Sierra 170 gr has shot well outta this gun, so I can't rule out 170 gr. bullets completely. Don't know if the gun doesn't like 3031 or just doesn't like the 170 gr. Rem and Hornady. It certainly seems to like 150 gr bullets (which BTW, have an longer OAL, and may be part of the reason they seem to shoot better).
~Michael
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Every gun is different. That's one thing for sure. They will usually have preferences. Mine have been easy. I appreciate that and take them out now and again and talk nice to them. Maybe that helps.



Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
My 30-30s have all been very user-friendly in terms of practical accuracy. By "practical accuracy" I'm talking 2.5"-3.0" five-shot groups at 150 yards with just about any 150 or 170 grain bullet, jacketed or cast. More important--the first shot from a cold/clean bore goes within this group. In this day of 0.5 MOA deer rifles, a 3" group sounds like a buckshot pattern, but 150 yards is about as far as I want to go with a 30-30 on deer, and that 3" group is still only 1.5" of radial distribution. If you do your part, the bullet will do the right thing. One of the fine hidden benefits of the 30-30's sedate ballistics is the great controlled expansion possible with inexpensive conventional cup-and-core rifle bullets.
I space out my group shots about 2 minutes apart. Rapid-fire can cause bullets to walk, and after your load is established and a sight setting achieved it is good to run a few 5-shot groups rapid-fire to see about dispersion as the barrel heats up. This is quite variable from rifle to rifle.
The only "trick" I employ is to assure that all cases are trimmed to equal length prior to bullet seating. Even roll crimp characteristics result from this equal case length using conventional crimp shoulders in most seater dies. I use WW-748, WC-846, IMR-3031, and IMR-4895 in my jacketed 30-30 loading. The first two powders (sphericals) give about 75-100 FPS more velocity at safe pressures than do the IMR "stick" powders, and meter more easily--but I can't see a bit of accuracy advantage with any of them. The deer and coyotes can't tell a difference, either.
I space out my group shots about 2 minutes apart. Rapid-fire can cause bullets to walk, and after your load is established and a sight setting achieved it is good to run a few 5-shot groups rapid-fire to see about dispersion as the barrel heats up. This is quite variable from rifle to rifle.
The only "trick" I employ is to assure that all cases are trimmed to equal length prior to bullet seating. Even roll crimp characteristics result from this equal case length using conventional crimp shoulders in most seater dies. I use WW-748, WC-846, IMR-3031, and IMR-4895 in my jacketed 30-30 loading. The first two powders (sphericals) give about 75-100 FPS more velocity at safe pressures than do the IMR "stick" powders, and meter more easily--but I can't see a bit of accuracy advantage with any of them. The deer and coyotes can't tell a difference, either.
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
This is quite interesting that a couple of fellows get the best groups in their 30-30s with a certain load which doesn't work well in another fellows rifles. What explains this??? 

Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
They are different guns.Old Savage wrote:This is quite interesting that a couple of fellows get the best groups in their 30-30s with a certain load which doesn't work well in another fellows rifles. What explains this???
Different guns have cumulative differences in tolerances, even guns with sequential serials. Those differences affect breaching, barrel vibrations, bore dimensions, stock harmonics, and so forth. All those things react differently to the differences in powder burn rates, bullet configuration/dimensions, even to the primer/cartridge case absorbtion of shock from the firing pin/hammer strike. I sometimes think it is more remarkable if several guns do well with the same load.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
What I find remarkable is that Winchester, Remington and Federal can produce millions of rounds of ammo, that most guns can shoot "good enough" for the average hunter. My .30-30 didn't like my reloads with the 170 gr. Core Lokt, but it shoots Remington factory ammo well enough.Hobie wrote:I sometimes think it is more remarkable if several guns do well with the same load.
~Michael
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Old Savage wrote:This is quite interesting that a couple of fellows get the best groups in their 30-30s with a certain load which doesn't work well in another fellows rifles. What explains this???
Lots of variables. From different shooters to different techniques to different rifles to different primers to different lots of powder to different lots of bullets to .... you get the drift.


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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Hobie - I see that different rifles will do better with one load than another but in this caliber it seems more common for someone to state that a certain load works better in all their rifles. And a few guys have stated something like that over time here. I am wondering if the load works better with the cumulatives of their loading technique: crimp, trim, OAL, etc.
I could state that I personally have not in this caliber been able to out do the best factory ammo of about 3/4" at 100 or actually get better than about 1 1/2" for even a single group so am certainly not knowledgeable in the variables here. And that is in about 500 rds. I have done much better with any of the bottle necks I use.
I could state that I personally have not in this caliber been able to out do the best factory ammo of about 3/4" at 100 or actually get better than about 1 1/2" for even a single group so am certainly not knowledgeable in the variables here. And that is in about 500 rds. I have done much better with any of the bottle necks I use.
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
Slick, I was a little concerned that you were only shooting 3-shot groups to test a load for accuracy. In my opinion, 5 is minimum. I will often have 5 shot groups that consistently have 4 shots in less than 2" and then a fifth one that widens the group to 3". If I really want to test a load for accuracy, I will very carefully fire a 10-shot group. A sampling of that size will really tell the story.
As for why the same load does not always work the same in different guns, in my opinion, for the Model 94, barrel harmonics are the biggest factor, assuming the actual cartridges have been properly loaded, seated, and crimped.
As for why the same load does not always work the same in different guns, in my opinion, for the Model 94, barrel harmonics are the biggest factor, assuming the actual cartridges have been properly loaded, seated, and crimped.
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
duplicate post removed
Last edited by KirkD on Tue Oct 14, 2008 12:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Kirk: An old geezer who loves the smell of freshly turned earth, old cedar rail fences, wood smoke, a crackling fireplace on a snowy evening, pristine wilderness lakes, the scent of
cedars and a magnificent Whitetail buck framed in the semi-buckhorn sights of a 120-year old Winchester.
Blog: https://www.kirkdurston.com/
cedars and a magnificent Whitetail buck framed in the semi-buckhorn sights of a 120-year old Winchester.
Blog: https://www.kirkdurston.com/
Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
I've had too many thing going on and haven't had a chance to approach things as I had originally intended, so I took one bullet, one powder, and went from there, shooting groups of five.KirkD wrote:Slick, I was a little concerned that you were only shooting 3-shot groups to test a load for accuracy. In my opinion, 5 is minimum.
Here's my five shot group from yesterday. Something didn't feel right when I got into position for the fourth shot and pulled it about 3" away from the other shots.


Load is Win Brass, Fed LR, Hornady 150 Gr. RN, 28 gr. of RL7, cartridge OAL 2.544".
~Michael
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
By gum! 3/4" 4-shot group! Are you using a scope by any chance?
Kirk: An old geezer who loves the smell of freshly turned earth, old cedar rail fences, wood smoke, a crackling fireplace on a snowy evening, pristine wilderness lakes, the scent of
cedars and a magnificent Whitetail buck framed in the semi-buckhorn sights of a 120-year old Winchester.
Blog: https://www.kirkdurston.com/
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Re: .30-30 loads, going back to square one
William's FP and the factory front, BUT I was only at 50 yards. This Saturday I plan on taking that same load back to the range and seeing what I can do at 100.KirkD wrote:By gum! 3/4" 4-shot group! Are you using a scope by any chance?
~Michael