B rampton Mike
CGN Regular
- Location
- Brampton Ontario
WOW you guys are getting WAY to technical for me!

For the ones who responded that i understood thanks!
Brampton Mike


Brampton Mike


Brampton Mike


Nope. A more-deeply seated bullet takes up exactly the same extra volume in a pencil-sized case or a tuba-sized case.
The volume of a cylinder (our geometric stand-in for a bullet base) is pi r2 h. 'h' is the amount the bullet sticks into the case, and 'r' is half the diameter of the bullet. Basic math here.
That's fine then, because you can fill the case with powder along the sides of the bullet. When you seat the bullet, powder displaced by the base will flow up along the sides.That is only true if [...] or if you could fill the case with powder along the sides of the bullet.
223, Hornady 75gr #2279 seated to mag length (2.250"), H322. My load fully fills the case but is not compressed. The bullet sticks way into the case.That has not been my experience with long heavy for caliber bullets, but if you can figure out how to do it in a bottle neck case good for you.
223, Hornady 75gr #2279 seated to mag length (2.250"), H322. My load fully fills the case but is not compressed. The bullet sticks way into the case.
Stick your finger into a pile of powder. The powder displaces around your finger rather than compressing under it. Works the same with a bullet base.
A long stick powder (e.g. IMR 4895)might want to lock up some rather than flow, but H322 is fine, as is any ball powder (e.g., BL-C(2) and others I've used).
Perhaps the issue here is powder choice.
Certainly if the case was only a bit larger than a bullet the powder might not want to flow up into the small remaining gap. But in a normal case, with the powders I've mentioned, there's enough room to the sides - the .223 is not a short/fat case. The 270 / 270wsm thing should work the same way.



























