I am fairly new to hand loading. I've reloaded tons of handgun and shotgun rounds, but lately it's time to feed the bolt gun. I've gone as far as replicating Federal Gold Metal match and I am progressing to more advanced processes such as seating projectiles depth in relationship to the chamber. I have a .308 bolt gun from a very reputable company and it shoots 1/4 to 3/8 MOA with 168gr FGMM. I just recently bought a Hornady bullet comparator to measure bullet depth from ogive to back of the case and a Hornady OAL gauge to measure the bullet seating depth that just barely touches the lands in barrel. When I take the measurement from this rifle I get a measurement of 3.165" from back of case to ogive. When I measure factory FGMM, I get a measurement of 3.237. I'm no mathematician, but I'm pretty sure that means factory FGMM is seated .072" 'in the lands'!!!!! I measured both 10x and I'm pretty sure I'm measuring right (ex-machinist).
I have a couple questions:
1.) How concerned should I be with this?
2.) Do I run the risk of over pressure with FGMM?
3.) Should I send the rifle to the manufacturer for re-chambering?
Any advice or comments will be appreciated.
A Note: During a rifle class, a cease fire was called and I had issues (once) with unchambering a round. I had to slam the bolt up and back which resulted in the bullet staying lodged in the lands and powder spilling out everywhere. I punched the bullet out from the barrel with a cleaning rifle and it ran fine after. I assume this is from the bullet being seated in the lands and not behind.
Thanks,
Mike
I have a couple questions:
1.) How concerned should I be with this?
2.) Do I run the risk of over pressure with FGMM?
3.) Should I send the rifle to the manufacturer for re-chambering?
Any advice or comments will be appreciated.
A Note: During a rifle class, a cease fire was called and I had issues (once) with unchambering a round. I had to slam the bolt up and back which resulted in the bullet staying lodged in the lands and powder spilling out everywhere. I punched the bullet out from the barrel with a cleaning rifle and it ran fine after. I assume this is from the bullet being seated in the lands and not behind.
Thanks,
Mike