It seems as there is a fair bit of witch craft and secret sauce involved with 22lr chambers and very minimal information out there about chambering them. Just about anyone with basic machining skills and a little bit of reading on the internet can bullshit their way through chambering a centerfire cartridge, that’s not really the case with rimfire.
More specifically what I’m referring to is the “jam” portion of chambering and choosing headspace.
From the few barrels I’ve measured, the case protrusion after touching the rifling has been .130-.140”. Is that always the case? Is there benefits from more jam? Less jam? Obviously at some point this becomes jammed past the bullet and isn’t really doing anything. Do you determine the jam based off the bullet “shoulder” and tailor that specifically to the bullet you’re choosing to shoot?
As for headspace, it seems as it’s either team .041 or team .043. Is there a benefit to going short and having some crush? Or should you plan on going long? I’d imagine this is a tailor it to what you’re planning on shooting.
I have a clymer match finish reamer and the first chamber I cut for my bergara shot well most of the time. Chambered to .135” of jam and .043 headspace. It had some random flyers from time to time which I think was more related to my tenon than anything else (helicoil set up essentially) and I ended up swapping the factory bergara barrel back on from extraction issues. I got a RimX on the way and I’d like to learn a bit more about the chamber itself before it gets here.
I’d mention reamers here to but man, that is a ton of Information and I’d like to keep this thread within some attention spans.
More specifically what I’m referring to is the “jam” portion of chambering and choosing headspace.
From the few barrels I’ve measured, the case protrusion after touching the rifling has been .130-.140”. Is that always the case? Is there benefits from more jam? Less jam? Obviously at some point this becomes jammed past the bullet and isn’t really doing anything. Do you determine the jam based off the bullet “shoulder” and tailor that specifically to the bullet you’re choosing to shoot?
As for headspace, it seems as it’s either team .041 or team .043. Is there a benefit to going short and having some crush? Or should you plan on going long? I’d imagine this is a tailor it to what you’re planning on shooting.
I have a clymer match finish reamer and the first chamber I cut for my bergara shot well most of the time. Chambered to .135” of jam and .043 headspace. It had some random flyers from time to time which I think was more related to my tenon than anything else (helicoil set up essentially) and I ended up swapping the factory bergara barrel back on from extraction issues. I got a RimX on the way and I’d like to learn a bit more about the chamber itself before it gets here.
I’d mention reamers here to but man, that is a ton of Information and I’d like to keep this thread within some attention spans.