I apologize for the couple threads I’ve posted lately, getting back into the reloading game after some time off.
I’m trying to find the lands on a 223 and I just can’t figure this out. I have a smith chambered 223, with an origin action .
I have measured factory ammo (fired) with a headspace of 1.459” (using Hornady comparator), the fireformed brass is nearly identical at 1.460”. I also have virgin starline brass measuring at 1.460” (+\- .001, surprisingly consistent).
It appears my 223 chamber is on the shorter side. No issue there, got it. I have even put a piece of scotch tape on the back of a case (unfired, same match ammo) and it will no longer chamber without resistance. So I’m confident my measurements are correct.
Now comes the part that’s getting me…. Finding the lands. I take a piece of virgin brass (which is very close to my chamber size, but confirmed it fits with no resistance on bolt close) and using the wheeler method, keep seating the bullet back until the bolt closes easily (firing pin assembly removed). The zermatt always has a smidge of resistance due to the gas block, but it’s extremely light.
So I starting seating bullets , get a hard stop, seat it farther, get a hard stop, rinse and repeat. I finally get to a point where the bolt is “mushy” on bolt close. The problem is, it stays mushy no matter how much farther I seat that bullet back. I figured once the bullet didn’t touch the lands, it would close extremely easily.
I took a reading on my Hornady comparator of the CBTO for when the mushiness started, 1.960”. Then made a dummy round for 1.960” just to confirm, and the bolt was at a hard stop again.
I cannot figure this out for the life of me.
I’m trying to find the lands on a 223 and I just can’t figure this out. I have a smith chambered 223, with an origin action .
I have measured factory ammo (fired) with a headspace of 1.459” (using Hornady comparator), the fireformed brass is nearly identical at 1.460”. I also have virgin starline brass measuring at 1.460” (+\- .001, surprisingly consistent).
It appears my 223 chamber is on the shorter side. No issue there, got it. I have even put a piece of scotch tape on the back of a case (unfired, same match ammo) and it will no longer chamber without resistance. So I’m confident my measurements are correct.
Now comes the part that’s getting me…. Finding the lands. I take a piece of virgin brass (which is very close to my chamber size, but confirmed it fits with no resistance on bolt close) and using the wheeler method, keep seating the bullet back until the bolt closes easily (firing pin assembly removed). The zermatt always has a smidge of resistance due to the gas block, but it’s extremely light.
So I starting seating bullets , get a hard stop, seat it farther, get a hard stop, rinse and repeat. I finally get to a point where the bolt is “mushy” on bolt close. The problem is, it stays mushy no matter how much farther I seat that bullet back. I figured once the bullet didn’t touch the lands, it would close extremely easily.
I took a reading on my Hornady comparator of the CBTO for when the mushiness started, 1.960”. Then made a dummy round for 1.960” just to confirm, and the bolt was at a hard stop again.
I cannot figure this out for the life of me.