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vegemite
's in the mail Ed
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02-24-2010 09:15 PM
# ADS
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Originally Posted by
trooper554877
Whilst the yanks wonder at varget or 2208, we here in
Australia
have a better powder for most of the more common shot mil calibres. It is 2209. I tried 2208 for quite awhile in different rifles but when I tried 2209 the results where mauch better. 2209 is slightly slower than 2208. i use 46.5 gns of 2209 behind a 174 SMK or Highland and get a variance of no more than 50 fps. they run at 2390-2440. Spot on mk7 ammo. I used it it my swedes when I was shooting them at a different load but equally as close to mil specs.
Less recoil, that is softer.
I zero my rifle and then the sight calibrates within i click on the Mk1 singer sight to the range wanted, can't get better than that!!
I load all my 303 service shoting ammo to that now and have converted 85% of fellow shooters to it and they can't believe the difference and much better accuracy.
Sorry Ed they don't export it yet!!
cheers
NED



No vegemite
this time, you owe me a case of beer 
The powder AR2209 is sold here in the U.S. as Hodgdons H4350 

http://www.hodgdon.com/PDF/MSDS%20Fi...ders/H4350.pdf
I myself prefer Reloader 15, it is the same powder loaded in our 7.62 NATO M118 Special Long Range sniper ammunition. 
Last edited by Amatikulu; 02-27-2010 at 11:09 AM.
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Advisory Panel
Just out of interest sake, 2206H is very good for light loads. The word from ADI is that it is stable enough (not prone to flash over) when loaded as low as 60% of maximum for a particular projectile weight. I have loaded the 123gn Nagant .311 pills into HXP cases with only 27 grains of 2206H for my daughter to use in my No5. With the limited amount we have fired, they seem to give reasonable accuracy and no stand-out "extra loud" shots yet either.
As with all load info- this is only what I have done. Anyone wishing to do similar, I would advise to contact the tech team at the manufacturers and get it straight from the horses mouth.
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Thank You to Son For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
jmoore
Don't have the faintest idea, but it looks tasty. Cut back on the lard these days, though! Never did the "teepee" thing myself, but the rest looks fairly familiar. Even have the same cast iron pot. Meat thrown over a smoldering fire before the carcass has cooled is the best!
Not quite sure how this ties in w/ Varget. (I sense another motive here, but no "duct taping" today, thanks.)
Oh, never mind!

41.0 gns Varget/2208 is great in the 303 ive dispacted many a vegemite
thief with that load
,nice to see you and your wife still go camping together
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Originally Posted by
Paul B
41.0 gns Varget/2208 is great in the 303 ive dispacted many a
vegemite
thief with that load

,nice to see you and your wife still go camping together

Oh, no! The secret's out!
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Originally Posted by
Edward Horton
Mr. jmoore
(The native American joke)
"Someone" stated that DuPont wasn't American because of its
French
origins, therefore the Remington's were not American because of their English origins, so therefore the Carnegie's of Pennsylvania were not American because of their Irish origins, and the Rockefeller's were not Americans because of their
German
origins and so on and so on.
On the other hand Mr. jmoore I'm 100% American, my real native American name is "Runswithheadspace" and my mothers maiden name was "Barfingvegemite".
The bottom line in this posting is the Australians now make over 75% of the old Remington/DuPont IMR series of powders. (The remaining 25% of the powders are made in
Canada
by French-Canadians)
P.S. I also understand jmoore is a native american name that translates to "Makesbentarrows".

That's my Indian name Makesbentarrows. I was given that name by heap big medicine man after last 3D shoot.
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