I've been chasing accuracy in my 357 win 73 and a model 92 both the new Mirokus. Boolit is RCBS 158, sized ,358 and LBT soft blue lubed. One load is 10 grs alliant 2400 which averages 1268 fps, no fillers. Sometimes I get nice 2 inch 50yd groups with semi buckhorn rear sight, 77 year old eyes. The other load is 6.2 gr Unique, same boolit no fillers,1284 fps avg. Both light crimp from Lee collett die. These averages are from the 73 with 16 inch barrel. The model 92 20 inch barrel is 1316 fps average with 10 gr 2400 and 158 rcbs boolit. These are very pleasant loads to shoot and I have no reason to change,But accuracy is or hasnt been consistant. Well after spending hours on this forum I think I finally found my problem. I think it is inconsistant alloy. Tested today and yesterday with two known alloys. What I did was use boolits from 2 specific alloys as a base. I have literally thousands of cast 358 boolts BUT they are not all the exact same alloy. I found excellant accuracy using the same exact alloy for my testing. My problem is my own doing, I was not using the same exact ingredients in my alloys, so each batch of boolits were just a little different. I have the cabin tree tester and thats what i have been using to sort my alloys kind of by hardness, so I have several jars of boolits but each a little bit different, enough to affect accuracy at 50 yds. So, I have a couple hundred pounds of ingots and I'm going to mix them all together to make one large stable alloy. Why didnt I do this years ago? Just didnt read and research enough. I dont want to remelt all the boolits I have so I will just load and shoot and keep good notes for each batch. Crap, I thought if the hardness was the same they would all shoot the same but it looks like I may have been wrong, what do you guys think? I guess alloy matters too.