I headed out to Little River today to try them out. The weather was plain atrocious .. winds were not that strong but gusting right to left, it rained intermittently and was generally not great for a small calibre. Still on, with the show.
I started will 11.0 grains of 2207 and went up in .1 grains until the max of 11.8. I had some 'failures' of the electronic scales that left me with 4 loaded rounds that I wasn't sure about so I made them foulers and put them to the side.
The accuracy node for my rifle comes in around 11/4 and 11.5 grains with groups around .7 of an inch (@100).

No 8 and 9 were a boo boo on my behalf. We had a small interruption to shoo some kangaroos off the range and I started shooting at the wrong target....
Some caveats:
the weather was foul and I did my best to wait until the wind had died down and it wasn't raining.
I am no bench shooter.
My scope is a FFP model so at 100 the cross hairs obscured the entire diamond. Upside was that if I couldn't see the diamond at all it was roughly centred.
My foulers shot a group the same as my best ( 11.4/5 ) known loads. As did the last of the factory ammo I had. Not sure what to make of the foulers....
Did I mention the weather?
I probably should redo the tests in better weather, or at least do it all again to validate the results. 11.0 - 11.3 were clearly worst so I don't know I would bother with them again. All my handloads shot lower than the factory so without a chrono to check, I am going to guess the velocities are down.
The primers all seemed to be flatter than I would have expected, even the lower loaded ones. The primer pockets were very tight when re priming, so tight I couldn't get the uniformer in to do it's thing. Maybe another reload cycle may fix that. Or they are crimped and I have to get rid of that....
