Mountaineer
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Has anyone used superformance powder in their 375 H&H. I’m considering trying it in with 235 tsx and 300 grain nosler partitions if I can find load data. Thanks!
Has anyone used superformance powder in their 375 H&H. I’m considering trying it in with 235 tsx and 300 grain nosler partitions if I can find load data. Thanks!
I have read that Hornady Superformance factory ammo is not necessarily using the same powder as the Superformance powder, so I would be cautious.Hornady is manufacturing it in 375. I’m assuming it’s the same powder, but certainly could be wrong.
This is true. Hodgdon superformance is very good for a handful of cartridges, like the WSMs. Its very effective in 6.5 creedmoor as well. However, it is not the same as any of the factory loaded superformance powders, even in the cartridges with burn rates the Hodgdon powder is designed for.I have read that Hornady Superformance factory ammo is not necessarily using the same powder as the Superformance powder, so I would be cautious.
This, I like IMR4064 really well, & WW760 is great.RL 15, Winchester 760, IMR 4064 all work well in my .375 H&H.
@MountaineerHas anyone used superformance powder in their 375 H&H. I’m considering trying it in with 235 tsx and 300 grain nosler partitions if I can find load data. Thanks!
@MountaineerHornady is manufacturing it in 375. I’m assuming it’s the same powder, but certainly could be wrong.
@fourfive8Superformance powder is a name given by Hodgdon for a specific fairly slow powder with burn characteristics suited to over bore cartridges like 22-250, 300 WSM and the like.
Superformance ammo is a name given by Hornady to a line of ammo. A name given for marketing purposes.
Two different things completely... one having nothing to do with the other. A confusion caused by using the same name for two complexity different things.
The 375 HH is not at all an over bore design so its best powders are in the medium burn rate range. The over bore cartridges like the 22-250 usually use powders in the slow burn rate range.
Of course it can be used in most any caliber... if it will burn up to progressive pressure enough to be a more or less stable burn. The question is "best suitable". The 375 HH is almost a tapered straight wall when considering internal ballistics... a far cry from most modern shouldered cartridges. In this context, "over bore" simply implies significant shoulder constriction that will show increased pressurization for slow, progressive powders. Reloading data manuals would be tens of inches thick if every powder that "could be" used were tested and published for each cartridge.@fourfive8
It's a lso suitable in the 243, 25-06, and 30-06 according to Hornady 10th edition reloading manual. Strangely it is mainly listed for light for calibre projectile. My 25 isn't over bore but it give it a boost of a couple of hundred fps.
Bob
I noticed that Hornady had new superformance load data in the 11th edition that was not in earlier editions@fourfive8
It's a lso suitable in the 243, 25-06, and 30-06 according to Hornady 10th edition reloading manual. Strangely it is mainly listed for light for calibre projectile. My 25 isn't over bore but it give it a boost of a couple of hundred fps.
Bob
@NTXI noticed that Hornady had new superformance load data in the 11th edition that was not in earlier editions