Hi,
I know that the general idea of a hand-loading "development work up" process is to develop a cartridge that works with the barrel harmonics.
Does anyone know if it's ever been done the opposite way around? That is, has anyone ever tried to change their barrel harmonics to fit around a particular match grade OTC production rifle cartridge? E.g. by getting a long, 26.5 inch barrel for instance and chopping it down a quarter inch at a time to get information about what length barrel a cartridge likes (assuming length is the dominant factor in barrel harmonics - could be wrong there).
I am thinking that doing it this way, you could change a barrel once vs. having to hand load every cartridge every time. It probably wouldn't be as good as manual hand loading but if there is at least some consistency in manufacturing it might still be pretty good.
Maybe if this were easy or if there were a substantial market for it, Hornady would already be making guns or at least barreled action combos for specific factory cartridges. Or maybe they don't do it because "status quo" accuracy is good enough-- or at least more limited by the average shooter than by rifle/cartridges.
Anyway, kind of a pie in the sky question but I thought it was interesting and am curious to hear if anyone has any thoughts or information about this.
Thanks!
I know that the general idea of a hand-loading "development work up" process is to develop a cartridge that works with the barrel harmonics.
Does anyone know if it's ever been done the opposite way around? That is, has anyone ever tried to change their barrel harmonics to fit around a particular match grade OTC production rifle cartridge? E.g. by getting a long, 26.5 inch barrel for instance and chopping it down a quarter inch at a time to get information about what length barrel a cartridge likes (assuming length is the dominant factor in barrel harmonics - could be wrong there).
I am thinking that doing it this way, you could change a barrel once vs. having to hand load every cartridge every time. It probably wouldn't be as good as manual hand loading but if there is at least some consistency in manufacturing it might still be pretty good.
Maybe if this were easy or if there were a substantial market for it, Hornady would already be making guns or at least barreled action combos for specific factory cartridges. Or maybe they don't do it because "status quo" accuracy is good enough-- or at least more limited by the average shooter than by rifle/cartridges.
Anyway, kind of a pie in the sky question but I thought it was interesting and am curious to hear if anyone has any thoughts or information about this.
Thanks!