Quick question,,Can I buy factory 280 Remington ammo and fire it through my 280AI to obtain brass for reloading to 280AI ??
Sure, providing you can find the 280 Remington brass. I see no stock at X-Reload. Nosler also makes 280 AI, but it tends to be really expensive, and hard to find as well.
Yes, any 280 Rem ammo can be used. Try to buy one bulk lot so you have the same lot of brass. You'll feel quite a bit of 'crush' as you close the bolt as AI has a slightly tighter shoulder so that you can safely load a regular cartridge. But don't worry about that, it's normal for all AI.
prairie gun traders had two boxes of nosler in stock on saturday when i was there.89.99$ apiece
i almost purchased but i to have like fourhundred once fired .270 win brass that i will fire form some into .280 AI
The new nosler(saami) chamber is actually .014" shorter than the original Ackley version, I wonder why my factory 280 rem's still had case stretching? they were a tight fitIf you have a true 280 Ackley Improved chambered rifle then firing factory ammo is exactly how one goes about getting the correct brass and was how PO designed his reamer so as to tightly headspace on factory cartridges. To say that Nosler has a longer 280 AI chamber is a totally incorrect use of the term "AI", which means Ackley Improved and as such has a very definite set of dimensions. If a chamber is designed longer in the base to shoulder dimension than Ackley designed his, it is no longer an "AI" chamber, it is just something else with a 40* shoulder. If one blows out the shoulder on any cartridge to 40* without adhering to all the other dimensions of the Ackley chamber it becomes a 40* Improved cartridge but not an "AI" cartridge. Too many people call all 40* Improved wildcats "Ackley Improved" when in fact they are nothing like the AI other than a 40* shoulder. This is not correct and there are several features to the Ackley cartridges, that if not adhered to, exempt others from actually being AI cartridges. One of these features is the ability to fire factory parent cartridges in the AI chamber without excess headspace.
IH.........what indicators are you using in saying you are getting case stretch? Yet you say the bolt is closing snuggly on the factory 280 round.........this is very odd. What make of brass is it? When you say factory 280s are you talking factory loaded rounds or are you talking handloaded new factory 280 Rem brass? Can you section a case and post pics of the stretched area? What you say "flies in the face" of everything one learns on how to set up a cartridge to correctly headspace in ones rifle and eliminate or minimize case body stretching.
I suppose that in the case of headspacing on the neck/shoulder junction (as the Ackleys do for fireforming), the case could do all it's stretching at the web to move forward and fill out to the 40* shoulder, but this too would be odd, as it would mean that thicker, and supposedly harder brass in the web area, was stretching before the thinner, softer brass in the forward body and shoulder area............
I am having a hell of a time trying to get into photobucket now, so cant get pics on. They are factory loaded Winchester ballistic silvertips with nickel cases. You can see cracking in the plating at the web, and after cutting it in half you can see thinning in the brass there.IH.........what indicators are you using in saying you are getting case stretch? Yet you say the bolt is closing snuggly on the factory 280 round.........this is very odd. What make of brass is it? When you say factory 280s are you talking factory loaded rounds or are you talking handloaded new factory 280 Rem brass? Can you section a case and post pics of the stretched area? What you say "flies in the face" of everything one learns on how to set up a cartridge to correctly headspace in ones rifle and eliminate or minimize case body stretching.
I suppose that in the case of headspacing on the neck/shoulder junction (as the Ackleys do for fireforming), the case could do all it's stretching at the web to move forward and fill out to the 40* shoulder, but this too would be odd, as it would mean that thicker, and supposedly harder brass in the web area, was stretching before the thinner, softer brass in the forward body and shoulder area............
If you have a true 280 Ackley Improved chambered rifle then firing factory ammo is exactly how one goes about getting the correct brass and was how PO designed his reamer so as to tightly headspace on factory cartridges. To say that Nosler has a longer 280 AI chamber is a totally incorrect use of the term "AI", which means Ackley Improved and as such has a very definite set of dimensions. If a chamber is designed longer in the base to shoulder dimension than Ackley designed his, it is no longer an "AI" chamber, it is just something else with a 40* shoulder. If one blows out the shoulder on any cartridge to 40* without adhering to all the other dimensions of the Ackley chamber it becomes a 40* Improved cartridge but not an "AI" cartridge. Too many people call all 40* Improved wildcats "Ackley Improved" when in fact they are nothing like the AI other than a 40* shoulder. This is not correct and there are several features to the Ackley cartridges, that if not adhered to, exempt others from actually being AI cartridges. One of these features is the ability to fire factory parent cartridges in the AI chamber without excess headspace.



























