heres the responce,(it might help some of the other guys)
the 340 weatherby is exceptionally easy to load for, the only thing I would advise is that you should ONLY use federal #215 magmun primers and bullets of 225-grains weight and above when ELK/MOOSE hunting in the standard bullets as the velocity available turns most of the the lighter 180-200 grain bullets into glitter on impact.
the 340 weatherby is NOT a deer rifle, the loads the work well on ELK don,t work well on deer!
if your going to hunt deer the 200 grain hornady bullets work very well, (if you dont mind lost meat) keep in mind that a bullet that drives thru 4 feet of elk on a raking shot and destroys a shoulder then exits is a totally differant bullet than the bullet necessary to punch thru 12 inches of deer lungs
most ELK I shoot are hit with a 250 hornady bullet loaded to about 2850 fps, most fall instantly or run only a short distance, all bullets exit,this is exactly what I like, that same load on deer tends to zip thru,unless bone is hit, the deer almost always run a short distance then fall because the bullet expands slowly on minimal resistance
heres some data
http://www.inextinc.com/H1000340%20Loading%20Data.pdfhttp://www.loadyourown.com/loaddata/sresults.asphttp://www.centerfirecentral.com/cgi-bin/database.plhttp://www.norma.cc/nladdtab/340WM.htmthe two best loads Ive found are (work up slowly, they may be too hot for your rifle)
225 hornady bullet,215 fed primer,imr-4831 82 grains
this is for hunting both deer and elk (a good all around load)
250 grain hornady 215 federal primer ,H4831 83 grains (ELK LOAD)
sight in 3.5" high at 100 yards and youll be almost dead on at 300 yards.about 5" low at 350 and 11 inches low at 400, 28 inchs low at 500 yards with the 250 grain and just slightly flatter with the 225 grain