OK,
I cannot really quite figure out what I am seeing today. I have Hornady's OAL Gauge, their bullet comparator, and headspace gauges as well. I am trying to work up a load in a Savage 7mm SAUM that I screwed together. Has a custom throated Shilen Select Match barrel. Bullet is Berger 180 VLD Hunting
I used the Hornady OAL gauge to determine the max OAL to the rifling. First round, measured 3x times and came up with 2.277" base to ogive. My headspace gauge says that the Hornady "dummy" cartridge is within .001" of my own casings.
My headspace is about .008" more than the dummy cartridge and my own casings. As determined with layers of scotch tape, each at .002". Bolt closes with effort at 4 layers, which I have verified adds .008" to the cartridge length, measured to the datum line with the Hornady Headspace gauges.
So:
I wanted to jamb the bullet just enough into the rifling so that I get that benefit, but not so much that I start having bullets stick in the barrel if I have to unload. Its a hunting rifle.
I start the loads light, and start at 2.285" (2.277" plus the .008" headspace) base to ogive. I have a Forster Ultra die set with the micrometer head. I chamber each round to be sure and no trouble at all closing bolt. Bullet does not stick in rifling.
So the next string, I take the bullet out .005", thinking perhaps I will feel a little resistance or perhaps the bullet will hang up. Base to ogive is now 2.290" No resistance to bolt close, no stuck bullet, and when cartridge is removed, Base to ogive still is at 2.290".
Next three rounds, I again seat .005" further out, expecting that I will start to either feel some resistance on bolt close, or at least see the bullet pushed back into the case. Neither occurs. No stuck bullet, Base to ogive remains at 2.295" We are now at .018" longer than the measured base to ogive using the Hornady OAL gauge.
I repeat this for each 3 shot string, each time extending the base to ogive by .005" increments. I end up at 2.345" base to ogive for the last string. This is a full .060" beyond where I thought the bullet was hitting the rifling. Never did the bullet stick in the barrel. Never did the bolt hesitate to close. Never did the bullets come out pushed any deeper into the neck.
I cannot understand. I *think* I am using the OAL gauge correctly. Tried my measurement one more time just now. Pushed the bullet into the rifling as hard as I could limited by fear of breaking the plastic plunger rod. Made sure the dummy cartridge was firmly against the shoulder. With all that effort, my measurement did go from 2.277" to 2.296" The bullet was firmly stuck in the barrel -- had to remove with a wood dowel.
But 2.296" plus the .008" headspace is still .041" less than the base to ogive of the last group of cartridges I loaded. They did not stick in the rifling, and did not push back into the case.
I am worried that I have a burr or other machining defect in the throat that I am unable to "push by" with the OAL gauge, but loaded rounds are pushing by. But I see no scratches or dings in the bullets, even at the 2.345" base to ogive. I think I can see some slight burnishing from the rifling.
I am thinking a borescope is in order to find out what is going on in there???? Ideas?? Am I missing something totally obvious?
I cannot really quite figure out what I am seeing today. I have Hornady's OAL Gauge, their bullet comparator, and headspace gauges as well. I am trying to work up a load in a Savage 7mm SAUM that I screwed together. Has a custom throated Shilen Select Match barrel. Bullet is Berger 180 VLD Hunting
I used the Hornady OAL gauge to determine the max OAL to the rifling. First round, measured 3x times and came up with 2.277" base to ogive. My headspace gauge says that the Hornady "dummy" cartridge is within .001" of my own casings.
My headspace is about .008" more than the dummy cartridge and my own casings. As determined with layers of scotch tape, each at .002". Bolt closes with effort at 4 layers, which I have verified adds .008" to the cartridge length, measured to the datum line with the Hornady Headspace gauges.
So:
I wanted to jamb the bullet just enough into the rifling so that I get that benefit, but not so much that I start having bullets stick in the barrel if I have to unload. Its a hunting rifle.
I start the loads light, and start at 2.285" (2.277" plus the .008" headspace) base to ogive. I have a Forster Ultra die set with the micrometer head. I chamber each round to be sure and no trouble at all closing bolt. Bullet does not stick in rifling.
So the next string, I take the bullet out .005", thinking perhaps I will feel a little resistance or perhaps the bullet will hang up. Base to ogive is now 2.290" No resistance to bolt close, no stuck bullet, and when cartridge is removed, Base to ogive still is at 2.290".
Next three rounds, I again seat .005" further out, expecting that I will start to either feel some resistance on bolt close, or at least see the bullet pushed back into the case. Neither occurs. No stuck bullet, Base to ogive remains at 2.295" We are now at .018" longer than the measured base to ogive using the Hornady OAL gauge.
I repeat this for each 3 shot string, each time extending the base to ogive by .005" increments. I end up at 2.345" base to ogive for the last string. This is a full .060" beyond where I thought the bullet was hitting the rifling. Never did the bullet stick in the barrel. Never did the bolt hesitate to close. Never did the bullets come out pushed any deeper into the neck.
I cannot understand. I *think* I am using the OAL gauge correctly. Tried my measurement one more time just now. Pushed the bullet into the rifling as hard as I could limited by fear of breaking the plastic plunger rod. Made sure the dummy cartridge was firmly against the shoulder. With all that effort, my measurement did go from 2.277" to 2.296" The bullet was firmly stuck in the barrel -- had to remove with a wood dowel.
But 2.296" plus the .008" headspace is still .041" less than the base to ogive of the last group of cartridges I loaded. They did not stick in the rifling, and did not push back into the case.
I am worried that I have a burr or other machining defect in the throat that I am unable to "push by" with the OAL gauge, but loaded rounds are pushing by. But I see no scratches or dings in the bullets, even at the 2.345" base to ogive. I think I can see some slight burnishing from the rifling.
I am thinking a borescope is in order to find out what is going on in there???? Ideas?? Am I missing something totally obvious?
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