I just finished up a 6.5x47 for hunting purposes and after figuring out some issues have it all screwed together and shooting. the rifle was designed to be light and has a 20" #2 shilen barrel on it and will eventually be bedded in a B&C Alaskan TI stock. for now it is bolted in a McCrees chassis. the basis for this post isn't the rifle though, it the brass. I had intended to build a 6.5x47 years ago but I didn't like the idea of being married to lapua brass. I know its good and all but Winchester does just fine for me in most circumstances. anyway, what I did was shortened a 308 die about .250. after finding the right setting I can run once fired 22-250 brass through this die and then through a full length 6.5x47 die. what you have is a 6.5x47 with a little more body taper and a little more neck. I then trim them to 1.850 because they shorten a little upon firing. 36gr of re15 and a 140mk yields a perfect 6.5x47 case with a large primer pocket. we can argue all day long about the large vs small primer pocket on ES/SD numbers or their ability to handle pressure but I can tell you this: I have fired these cases over TWENTY times now and finally lost one primer pocket! ES has been running in the teens and SD well under 10fps!!!what I have been shooting is the 140mk at 2680fps average out of a 20" barrel. THIS IS NOT A LIGHT LOAD AND THE PRIMER POCKETS HAVE LASTED OVER 20 SHOTS......I cant compare anything for you VS. lapua brass because I have never had any in this caliber and probably never will. what I can tell you is that this is certainly a viable ALTERNATIVE. let the bashing begin!!!!
chuck
chuck
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