Johnn Peterson
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Chemainus B.C.
My Ruger #1 in .303 British shoots Federal 150 grain bullets quite well. I imagine that if the bore size was .314 to .316 they would have rattled all the way down the bore and given me 2 foot groups at 100 yards as opposed to the 1 1/2 inch groups I am getting with the Federal bullets.
I haven't handloaded yet, so I am sure mine will shoot even tighter. But those Federals worked well on moose. Deer are next on the list.
I have a pair of Jungle Carbines and although I haven't slugged the barrels, they both seem to do better accuracy wise using bullets of 0.312" diameter such as the Hornady 174gr and the Woodleigh 215gr.I have no interest in getting a No. 1 in 303 Br., but I was curious as to what their barrel specs would be in a modern made firearm. To that end, I called Ruger tech people and posted the following reply in the Reloading forum, in the thread Loading for the Ruger #1 303 British, post # 63.
- 6 groove.
- 1 - 10 twist
- Bore diameter, 0.303" - 0.305".
- Groove diameter, 0.314" - 0.316".




























. Silly, because in all the years I've been shooting, hunting and reloading, I've never miked a spent jacketed bullet. Cast bullets, especially when slugging a handgun barrel yes but never spent jacketed rifle bullets. Here's silly and I hope someone can set me straight. When the rifiling lands 'mark' a bullet, seeing as the metal can't be compressed, where does the metal the bore/lands displace go? Would this help explain where the 0.314" - 0.316" groove diameter and the 0.303" - 0.305" bore measurement quotes Ruger gave me 'come' from??





















