How was the accuracy?
The question is, is it necessary? 2 grains more is just going to be harder on your brass and your shoulder. There are precious few creatures that walk the earth that will take a hit from a .416 350 TSX at 2,550 fps and walk it off. I would be willing to bet that aside from elephant, that bullet, at that speed will take anything in the world with aplomb. That Jameson brass ain't cheap and it is hard to come by. Just food for thoughtI believe I can increase another 2 grains
The question is, is it necessary? 2 grains more is just going to be harder on your brass and your shoulder. There are precious few creatures that walk the earth that will take a hit from a .416 350 TSX at 2,550 fps and walk it off. I would be willing to bet that aside from elephant, that bullet, at that speed will take anything in the world with aplomb. That Jameson brass ain't cheap and it is hard to come by. Just food for thought
Agreed
Oh its not I guess. I am just really practical when it comes to my rifle. And yes, 2000MR was the go-to powder for my .416 ruger that pushed a 340 grain woodleigh to 2,600fps. It actually kicked less than my 400 grain loads too which was a pleasant surprise.Why is necessary even a concern. I'm enjoying working up these loads. If I had 2000MR Speer data says I could push a 350 grain bullet to 2800FPS+