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Loading for the 308 Winchester

ammo

Bill Gabbard

Some folks are always looking for the newest and fastest round on the market, while others are looking for those obsolete or nearly obsolete calibers. I find myself leaning more toward the latter but have a hard time passing up an old classic. One of those classic rounds - the 308 Winchester- seems to be enjoying a resurgence in popularity. A few years ago, I had given my Grandson Waylon my Kimber 308 and haven’t done a lot of loading for the 308 since. My wife filled that empty slot in my gun cabinet last year at Christmas with a Bergara B14 Hunter and put me back in the reloading room working with the 308.

While testing for this article, as usual I called on my friends that own 308 chambered rifles. We put nine (9) bolt rifles through their paces as well as an AR style rifle, a DPMS AR 10T. We used bolt action rifles from a variety of manufacturers including Bergara, Kimber, Remington, Ruger, Savage, and Tikka. This gave me a good spread from a super lightweight mountain rifle to a heavy bench gun and covered the price range from high to low as well.

308 ammo

Barnes Bullets

The 5 ½ pound Kimber Montana with its pencil thin 22-inch barrel preferred 130 grain bullets and had to cool after 3 shots but still managed to group Barnes 130 gr TTSX bullets into a 0.566 inch group. This combination has proven quite effective on Whitetails. The Bergara B14 and the Tikka T3 both joined the half-inch club using the Barnes 165 TSX

Rifle

Case

Primer

Powder

Charge

Bullet

Group

Kimber Montana

Federal

R 9 ½ L

Varget

48.5

Barnes 130 TTSX

0.566

Bergara B-14 Hunter

Federal

F 210

StaBall Match

46.5

Barnes 165 TSX

0.392

Tikka T-3

Federal

CCI 200

StaBall Match

46.4

Barnes 165

TSX

0.463

 

Berger Bullets

berger

berger

Geoff Esterline of Capstone Precision was kind enough to provide me with a nice selection of .308 caliber bullets to try and the results were quite impressive. The best groups of the test came with a Remington 40X that had a slow twist barrel and loved the Berger 115 Flat Base Target bullets. The Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R had a field day with the Berger 175 Open Tip Match and the 185 Open Tip Match Juggernaut bullets putting 4 different loads under one-inch. The Bergara went under the one-half inch mark with the 155.5 Full Bore Target bullets and under the one-inch mark with the 185 Classic Hunters. Five different bullets and one trip to the range for each bullet produced groups under an inch for all of them.

Rifle

Case

Primer

Powder

Charge

Bullet

Group

Remington 40 X

Norma

F 210

BL-C(2)

52.0

Berger 115 Flat Base Target

0.170

Remington 40 X

Norma

F 210

N-140

42.5

Berger 115 Flat Base Target

0.154

Bergara B-14 Hunter

Winchester

F 210

N 140

42.5

Berger 155.5 Full Bore Target

0.357

Bergara B-14 Hunter

Winchester

F 210

TAC

41.3

Berger 185 Classic Hunter

0.926

Bergara B-14 Hunter

Winchester

F 210

Big Game

47.0

Berger 185 Classic Hunter

0.979

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

F 210

RL-15

41.3

Berger 175 OTM

0.511

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

F210

N 140

41.0

Berger 185 OTM JUGGERNAUT

0.512

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

F 210

Big Game

47.0

Berger 185 OTM JUGGERNAUT

0.664

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

F 210

IMR 4064

40.0

Berger 185 OTM JUGGERNAUT

.0711

 

Hornady Bullets

hornandy

Seth Swerczek of Hornady came through again with a nice variety of Hornady bullets for the test and the results were outstanding as we have come to expect from them. We used rifles ranging from the heavy barrel bolt action model to AR style rifles that produced groups under one-half inch. Dustin Cooper’s DPMS AR-10T turned in a group of 0.438 inch - pretty amazing for an AR style rifle. Tylers Price’s Rem 700 shot a 0.241 inch group with the old standard 150 gr SP bullet. The Bergara really likes one of my favorite bullets for Whitetail, the SST.

Rifle

Case

Primer

Powder

Charge

Bullet

Group

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

CCI 200

RL 15

42.0

Hornady 150 SP

0.241

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

CCI 200

N 140

41.8

Hornady 180 SP

0.634

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

Federal

CCI 200

IMR 8208 XBR

38.5

Hornady 180 SP

0.824

Bergara B-14 Hunter

Federal

CCI 200

N 150

52.3

Hornady 165 SST

0.503

Savage Model 10 FCP SR

Winchester

F 210

N 150

41.5

Hornady 178 ELD-X

0.304

DPMS AR 10 T

Remington

F 210

RL-15

43.0

Hornady 168 A-Max

0.438

 

Nosler Bullets

Several years ago, good friend Tommy Floyd brought his Remington 700 ADL Synthetic in 308 to the loading room wanting me to help him work up a load that he could take Elk hunting with confidence. A good stiff load of Hodgdon Powder’s BL- C (2) pushing Nosler’s 165 gr AccuBond shot near quarter inch groups and gave Tommy the confidence he needed to take a 900 pound Bull Elk with one shot, not to mention the fourteen deer and two coyote he has taken with the same load since then. Nosler’s Zach Waterman sent us additional bullets to use on this project and their accuracy should give anyone confidence.

Rifle

Case

Primer

Powder

Charge

Bullet

Group

Remington 700 ADL-S

PPU

F 210

BL-C(2)

45.7

Nosler 165 gr AccuBond

0.296

Ruger American

FC

F 210

BL-C(2)

46

Nosler 165 gr AccuBond

0.573

Bergara B-14 Hunter

FC

CCI 200

N-140

42.5

Nosler 150 gr AccuBond

0.520

Savage 11

Win

F 210

Win 748

49.0

Nosler 125 gr Ballistic Tip

0.691

 

Speer Bullets

David Gabbard Jr, a serious competitor in our local Lollipop Matches, had been telling me about the accuracy he was getting from Speer’s new 172 gr Impact which is their entry into the polymer tipped bullet game. The old Turkey Slayer, J.J. Reich from Vista Outdoor. sent me a few of their 172 and 190 Impact bullets to try for this article. J.J and David were on the money on these bullets. Tyler Price tried five loads through his Remington 700 using the 172 grainers and four of them shot under an inch. I tried four loads using the 190 gr Impact bullets through Dustin Cooper’s Savage Model 10 FCP-SR and two of them came in under an inch. These bullets show lots of promise!
 

Rifle

Case

Primer

Powder

Charge

Bullet

Group

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

FC

CCI 200

RL-15

43.0

Speer 172 gr Impact

0.490

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

FC

 

CCI 200

Varget

40.0

Speer 172 gr Impact

0.531

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

FC

CCI 200

Varget

42.0

Speer 172 gr Impact

0.565

Remington 700 MILSPEC 5R

FC

CCI 200

IMR 4064

42.0

Speer 172 gr Impact

0.977

Savage Model 10

FCR-SR

FC

CCI 200

RL-15

40.0

Speer 190 gr Impact

0.733

Savage Model 10

FCR-SR

FC

CCI 200

IMR 4064

40.0

Speer 190 gr 1mpact

0.554

 

I had such a wide variety of 308 bullets to try that most of these loads bullets got a one-time chance to shine, and they really did quite well. I loaded either four or five sets of loads to shoot a three-shot group. Three of the rifles used were heavy barrel models and one was an AR style rifle, but the rest were standard weight hunting rifles in bone stock configuration. Every bullet that was tested turned in good results with at least one of the tested powders. VihtaVuori’s N140 and N 150 powder were strong with most bullets and Alliant’s Reloder 15 performed well with a variety of bullet weights. Hodgdon’s Varget, and BL-C(2) do well with most bullets and the new StaBall Match is fast becoming a favorite. The result shown here pretty well proves that if you will take the time to try different powder and bullet combinations you can find a load for your 308 to fit nearly any purpose. Whether you are going after targets, varmints, Whitetail Deer, or Elk, the 308 Winchester is indeed a classic that can be loaded to fit your needs!

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