I am just starting to reload 308 Winchester for my son's Savage bolt action. The manuals I have state 2.015 or 2.005; how long do you trim your cases for 308?
Thank you
Thank you
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Definitely 2.005. 2.015 seems really long. If I remember correctly, my Remington 700 SPS started having stiff bolt closure around 2.010.
This wasn't FGMM, but I definitely shot it in that rifle. I believe these were once fired Federal cases. That rifle has since been rebuilt, but I still have those reloads. I'll pull them out tomorrow, disassemble a few and let you know. Maybe they needed a shoulder bump or something if that doesn't sound right to you.
I found some LC63 Match cases the other day. Resized them and some were 2.035" long. They chambered fine. Thinking they were on their last leg, I sectioned one and to my surprise I found no thinning of the case walls. That's amazing. Why is stuff do cheaply made these days?
I prefer to run the necks long. 2.005 is too short. Looks wrong. I suggest you find the actual length of your chamber.
I might be wrong on this one since I'm going off memory, but I believe the MAX length for .308 Win is 2.015, and the trim-to length is 2.005. So trim your cases to 2.005 and when they grow to 2.015 knock them back again.
Here's the SAAMI spec if you want to check it out - http://www.saami.org/pubresources/cc_drawings/Rifle/308 Winchester.pdf
Max length is what your chamber will allow. As all loading manuals do, they give trim lengths and charges that may be quite modest compared to what actually may work well for you. My rifle will chamber a piece of brass as long as 2.04".
You are right. The OP stated that he was just beginning to reload and I don't think his intention was to measure his chamber to find maximum length it would allow. SAAMI spec is a good starting place for a new reloader.
To be honest, I've never done any experimenting with accuracy and trim length. If there is a difference between 2.005 and 2.04, I'm not sure I could shoot it. Have you noticed significant (or insignificant) changes in accuracy when varying the trim length?
Thank you, I think I will trim to 2.005 to be safe. I appreciate all of your advice.
Max length is what your chamber will allow. As all loading manuals do, they give trim lengths and charges that may be quite modest compared to what actually may work well for you. My rifle will chamber a piece of brass as long as 2.04".
As the chamber length is different from rifle to rifle, as long as it's not made by the same reamer, consistently.
You want a Chamber Length Gauge, to measure the max case length, from there you set your desired trim to length, depending how close you want to be, it has it advantages, more consistent pressure can reduce es/sd.
It will help if you are using slow burning powders and high performance cartidges, as it will greatly reduce carbon build up in your chamber, as the closer the neck is to the second chamber shoulder, the faster the brass will seal the chamber.
This means it will reduce the backflow that gets into unsealed chamber clearances.
Following a realoding manual trim length is of course safer, if you don't know what you are doing.
And it kind of says itself you have to monitor brass stretching beforehand, so you know what is safe to trim to, and add a bit of clearance for safety.
Sinclair Chamber Length Gage | Sinclair Intl
So telling the OP that trimming to 2.xxx is the optimal trim length for his rifle, is wrong.
I let the brass grow to desired length and trim it every time after on the Giraud.
Inconsistent neck length affects Neck Tension, as many other variables.
I also turn the primer pocket uniformer lighlty at the set depth, every case every reload, to ensure even primer seating for the life span of the case.
And expand and turn the case every firing.
ANd anneal every 2-3 frirings.
Each to they're own though.
Is the 22 PPC the gauge you'd use for a .223/5.56 ?
Is the 270 Winchester the one you'd use for a 6.8 SPC II ??
Is the 30 carbine the one you'd use for the .308 Winchester??
Seems like they have weird descriptions for each case gauge.
Thanks!
Yes just get the corresponding caliber diameter. Not sure why the use the most obscure caliber possible as a reference/example.