Accurate 2230

Discover why Accurate 2230 is a top choice for high-volume shooters and precision reloaders. Ideal for 223 Remington and 308 Winchester, it ensures exceptional metering and performance.

Published: February 2026 | Last updated: May 2026


Accurate 2230 has been a staple on reloading benches for decades, and for good reason. It is a fast-to-intermediate burning, double-base spherical powder built around the needs of high-volume AR shooters and service rifle competitors – but it earns its place in any serious reloader’s cabinet well beyond that narrow description. If you load 223 Remington in any meaningful quantity, Accurate 2230 belongs in your burn rate lineup. It meters like a liquid, fills cases cleanly, and produces consistent velocities across a wide range of bullet weights.

This article is based on published manufacturer specifications, established load data, and documented field reports. Specifications and performance figures can vary between lots, rifles, and conditions. If you have loaded Accurate 2230 in practice – leave a comment below: real-world experience from the reloading bench is what separates verified data from manufacturer claims.


Powder Description and Technical Profile

Accurate 2230 is a double-base, spherical powder, meaning it contains both nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin as energy sources. The nitroglycerin component pushes energy density higher than single-base alternatives, which translates to real velocity gains in short-barreled rifles. A 16-inch AR-15 extracts noticeably more performance from 2230 than it would from a comparable single-base powder at similar charge weights.

The grain geometry is the practical heart of this powder’s appeal. Each grain is a nearly perfect sphere, uniformly sized and smooth-coated with a deterrent compound that moderates the burn rate and reduces sensitivity to temperature swings. Because there are no extruded sticks to bridge, shear, or pack unevenly, the powder flows through a mechanical measure the way a liquid would. Charge-to-charge consistency is simply not something most reloaders struggle with when using 2230 – the spherical geometry handles that problem before it starts.

Burn behavior is best described as a sharp, fast pressure onset that sustains well through the mid-bore and clears cleanly before the bullet exits a 20-inch barrel. This is why the powder works so efficiently in the 18-20 inch service rifle range. It does not suit long-barreled magnums or cartridges that need a slower, more progressive burn curve. Its place in the burn rate chart sits just slightly faster than Hodgdon H335 and Accurate 2460, and meaningfully slower than Accurate 2200.

Strengths:

  • Exceptional metering consistency (±0.04-0.07 grains) – a mechanical measure set at a given charge weight stays there, session after session
  • High bulk density (0.960-0.990 g/cc) means good case fill without compressed charges in 223 Remington with standard bullet weights
  • Versatile across 22-caliber and 6mm cartridges in the short-action range
  • Reasonable temperature stability for a double-base ball powder – approximately 0.8-1.2 fps/°F

Limitations:

  • Higher flame temperature than single-base alternatives like Vihtavuori N133 – slightly accelerated throat erosion in high-volume barrels
  • Runs dirtier at the low end of the pressure curve – loading well below minimum charges produces more residue
  • Not suited for temperature-critical long-range competition where Hodgdon Varget or IMR 4166 Enduron provide more consistent seasonal nodes

Technical Characteristics

PropertySpecification
ManufacturerAccurate Powders (Western Powders)
TypeDouble-Base Spherical
Bulk Density (g/cc)0.960 – 0.990
Grain ShapeSpherical / Ball
CoatingStandard Deterrent
Burn Rate PositionFast-Intermediate Rifle
Temperature Sensitivity~0.8-1.2 fps / °F

Temperature Stability

Expect roughly 0.8-1.2 fps per degree Fahrenheit of velocity shift – more than a true temperature-insensitive Extreme series powder, but far less than older-generation ball powders.

PowderTypeThermal Sensitivity
Accurate 2230Double-Base Ball~0.8-1.2 fps/°F
Hodgdon H4895Single-Base Extruded~0.3 fps/°F (Extreme)
Hodgdon VargetSingle-Base Short-Cut~<0.5 fps/°F (Extreme)
Hodgdon H335Double-Base Ball~1.0-1.5 fps/°F
Winchester 748Double-Base Ball~1.5-2.0 fps/°F

For varmint hunting at known distances or high-volume carbine training, 0.8-1.2 fps/°F is entirely workable. For precision long-range competition at 800-1,000 yards across seasons, a temperature-stabilized line is more appropriate.


Powder Comparison

Accurate 2230 often trades places with Ramshot X-Terminator in published load data – the two share nearly identical density and burn rate profiles. If you cannot source one, the other is a realistic starting point, but always verify against current published data and work up from the starting charge.

PowderBurn RateDensity (g/cc)Primary Cartridges
Accurate 2200Faster0.930223 Rem, 6.8 SPC
Alliant Reloder 10XFaster0.890222 Rem, 223 Rem
Accurate 2230Reference0.975223 Rem, 308 Win (light)
Hodgdon H335Slightly Slower0.985223 Rem, 5.56 NATO
Accurate 2460Slower0.980308 Win, 30-06 Springfield
Ramshot X-TerminatorSimilar~0.975223 Rem, 6mm PPC
Accurate 2015Slightly Faster0.895222 Rem, 223 Rem

vs. Hodgdon H335: H335 meters nearly as well and occupies the same burn rate neighborhood. Accurate 2230 tends to produce slightly higher velocities at comparable charges and fills cases a touch more efficiently. Neither is categorically better – it comes down to availability and which produces better standard deviations in the specific barrel.

vs. Hodgdon Varget: Varget is Extreme series single-base at ~<0.5 fps/°F – approximately 2-3x more seasonally stable. Better matched for 223 Remington with 69-80 grain match bullets and 308 Winchester standard loads. Accurate 2230 meters better and is better matched for 50-62 grain varmint production.

vs. Accurate 2015: Accurate 2015 is single-base short-cut at a slightly faster burn rate – better temperature stability from single-base chemistry, less metering efficiency from extruded geometry. For precision varmint work where single-base cleanliness and modest stability improvement matter, Accurate 2015 is appropriate. For volume production, Accurate 2230 is more efficient.

vs. Vihtavuori N133: N133 produces less carbon residue and has better throat longevity from its single-base chemistry. Accurate 2230 meters better and produces slightly higher velocities. For benchrest cleanliness and barrel life, N133 is the cleaner choice. For high-volume production, Accurate 2230 is the practical choice.


Recommended Cartridges and Applications

CartridgeBullet Weight RangeNotes
223 Remington50-62 grPrimary application – classic sweet spot
204 Ruger32-40 grVarmint maximum velocity
222 Remington50-55 grClassic small-bore varmint
6mm ARC90-108 grGas gun precision – verify data
7.62x39mm123-125 grModern sporting rifle bolt-action
308 Winchester110-150 grLight bullets only – see note
30-30 Winchester110-150 grLight bullets only – verify data

308 Winchester light-bullet note: appropriate only for 110-150 grain bullets where effective case volume decreases toward the small-case burn rate window. With standard 168-175 grain match bullets, the burn rate is too fast – pressures climb quickly with limited velocity return. Use Hodgdon Varget, Accurate 2520, or IMR 4895 for standard 308 Winchester loads.


Bullets

BrandModelWeightCartridgeApplication
HornadyV-MAX40-55 gr223 Rem / 204 RugerVarmint, Pest Control
SierraMatchKing52-69 gr223 RemTarget, Service Rifle
NoslerBallistic Tip40-60 gr223 RemVarmint, Hunting
BarnesTTSX50-62 gr223 RemLead-Free Hunting
SpeerTNT50-55 gr223 RemVarmint
BergerTarget52-68 gr223 RemPrecision Target
HornadyNTX32-35 gr204 RugerLead-Free Varmint
SierraBlitzKing40-55 gr223 Rem / 222 RemPrecision Varmint
WinchesterVarmint X40-55 gr223 RemVarmint Hunting
NoslerVarmageddon40-55 gr223 RemVarmint Control

Have you loaded Accurate 2230? Your practical data on charge weights, accuracy nodes in 223 Remington, metering consistency in production sessions, or comparison with H335 or Varget helps other reloaders more than any spec sheet. Leave a comment below.


Primers

PrimerTypeApplication
CCI No. 41Small Rifle Magnum (Mil-Spec)Required for AR-15 / 5.56 NATO semi-auto
CCI 450Small Rifle MagnumCold weather below 20°F, dense charges
Federal GM205MSmall Rifle MatchCompetition precision
CCI BR-4Small Rifle BenchrestPrecision bolt-action competition
CCI 400Small Rifle StandardGeneral 223 Rem, moderate temps
Federal 205Small Rifle StandardPrecision loads, bolt guns
Winchester WSRSmall Rifle StandardGeneral use
Remington 7-1/2Small Rifle Bench RestPrecision bolt-gun applications
Fiocchi Small RifleSmall Rifle StandardVolume production alternative
RWS 4033Small RiflePremium European precision
Ginex Small RifleSmall Rifle StandardCost-effective general use
Sellier & Bellot V360247Small Rifle StandardConsistent international option

For AR-15 / 5.56 NATO semi-automatic platforms, the CCI No. 41 mil-spec cup primer is required. Dense ball powder charges in semi-automatic platforms carry slam-fire risk with standard primer cups.

Always verify primer choice against published data. When switching primer brands, back off 3-5% from the listed starting charge and work up.


Metering and Equipment Compatibility

The metering performance of Accurate 2230 is its most talked-about characteristic. A well-adjusted volumetric measure – whether a Hornady Lock-N-Load Bench Rest Powder Measure, a Redding Match Grade 3BR, or a Lyman Brass Smith Powder Measure – will deliver within 0.1 grains charge-to-charge. For those running automated dispensers like the RCBS MatchMaster or the Hornady Auto-Charge Pro, 2230 runs fast through the trickler because the spherical grains flow freely.

For high-volume AR-15 production on a Dillon XL 750 or Hornady Lock-N-Load AP, the Dillon Precision Case Activated Powder Measure Assembly handles Accurate 2230 with near-liquid consistency at normal cycling speeds.


Reloading Safety Notes

All charge weights should come from current published Accurate / Western Powders data. Start 10% below the listed maximum and work up in 0.3-grain increments, watching for pressure signs: flattened or cratered primers, stiff bolt lift, ejector marks on case heads.

See the overpressure in reloading guide for systematic pressure sign identification.


Conclusion

Accurate 2230 has earned its place through practical merit. It is not the most temperature-stable powder, not the cleanest-burning, and not the ideal choice for heavy bullets or long-range competition. What it is, reliably and consistently, is the easiest high-volume rifle powder to work with at the bench.

Choose Accurate 2230 if you load 223 Remington at volume and want ball powder metering efficiency with competitive velocity. Choose Hodgdon Varget if temperature-insensitive performance for serious long-range competition is the priority. Choose Hodgdon H335 if military 5.56 NATO heritage documentation is specifically needed. Choose Vihtavuori N133 if throat longevity in sustained high-volume use and single-base cleanliness are the priorities. Choose Alliant Reloder 15 if higher velocity with somewhat better temperature stability in 22-250 Remington and 223 Remington match applications is the priority.


Editor’s note: Published load data and manufacturer specifications are the starting point – not the final word. Field experience from reloaders who have actually worked with this powder is the most reliable guide to what it does in practice. If you have used Accurate 2230, share your results in the comments.


Editorial note: Originally published February 2026, revised May 2026. The revision added internal links throughout to all referenced powders, bullets, cartridges, and equipment. Added the Accurate 2015, Accurate 2460, Ramshot X-Terminator, and Vihtavuori N133 competitor comparisons. Added the 6mm ARC application note. Extended the primer and bullet tables with full linked entries. Added three community data disclaimer blocks in the correct blockquote format. Updated revision date from April 2026 to May 2026.

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