I bought a Ballistic Advantage AR10 308 heavy Modern series barrel. I have a new set of Clymer 308 gauges. Go 1.630......No Go 1.634. The bolt closes on the Go gauge and also on the No Go (1.634). I called Ballistic Advantage and told them about it. They told me they use PTG No Go gauges that are 1.636... and that barrel is fine.
Not sure if I should be worried or it's fine. I know the BCG has to open and close, but I feel for accuracy it would be better to be a little "closer". I never plan to shoot NATO ammo through it... Handloads with Lapua, Eagle or FC brass. Thoughts? Thanks.
I have Forester go and no go gauges... they are made to exacting dimensions, no matter who grinds the gauge.
Does it say 308 Win on the barrel or 7.62 Nato? To know what it is exactly chambered for...
So:
308 go gauge 1.630"
308 no go gauge 1.634"
308 field gauge 1.638"
So for 308 Win 1.638" field gauge IS the max chamber length to safely fire the cartridge and use.
If a 308 chamber its probably fine, I used a factory Rem 700, no go chambered 308 rifle for 8000rds before changing the barrel.
It should not close on a standard no go with 2 pieces of trimmed scotch tape on the head of the gauge ...it would be better if the bolt wouldn't close on one added piece of tape.
Next:
A 7.62X51 Nato chamber:
Go gauge 1.635"
No go 1.6405"
The military has a field gauge too 1.6455" and an "emergency use" gauge above that.
The armorer won't take your weapon in the middle of a firefight.
If you reload adjust your full length sizing die according to the length of "Your" longer chambered rifle...or experience case head separation, on multiple firings.
My 18" heavy fluted modern BA barrel was not the best for accuracy...with just one good load... was 168 gr Speer, 50.5 gr 2000 MR, 2690 fps, 11 S/D 10 shots into .972" none of the other more expensive bullets did even close...a one load wonder.
So I changed it for a Proof SS barrel...for better all around accuracy. Yours may be different, just my experience. Also note a nato go gauge used to chamber a 308 would have a longer end result...not saying they did or didn't but the mix up is possible, and miss leading about a different "brand" of gauge...they must all be ground the same if SAAMI chambered...that's what "standards" are set up for... So all the ammo for a particular caliber, chamber safety in all the firearms, chambered for it.