30-06 ai

tony d

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I've been thinking about rechambering one of my 06 to this not 100% sure if I want to go that way I've heard good bad maybe ugly about this but never actually heard from anyone who directly has done one so I'm looking for your input
Cheers Tony
 
Have three barrels in 30-06 AI. A Precision rifle and two hunting rifles. The main benefit you will gain is brass stability. Performance will be on par with the 06 in normal loadings, however you can experiment and gain 50-100 fps depending on your barrel/bullet combo with normal pressures. If you hot load then you can well exceed the gains but at the risk of short brass life, popping primers, primer pocket expansion leading to bolt face wear and potential long term metal failures. If you are looking to make a magnum out of your 06, then consider a 300wm. For cool factor, just do it and you will not be disappointed.

Velocity gains will be best with longer barrels as such consider 24" barrel as a minimum for heavy bullets. However, I have one on a 22" sporter barrel and performance is as noted with 150s. I really like not having to manage brass once ackleyized. And you can keep costs to minimums by using a Lee collet die for sizing, 308 seater die for bullet seating, and from time to time FL using a standard 30-06 die to bump the shoulder back when cases get harder to extract (better to use a body die). The key when fire forming is to leave a false shoulder by running the brass first through a 338 or 8mm expander ball and then FL sizing back in small increments so there is a crush fit when chambering brass. I had a 338 WM die on hand so used that. This will minimize case stretch and reduce the chance for case head separation. not a big deal, just a few extra steps. If your smith correctly cuts the chamber you will not need to manage the false shoulder method so much. New brass requires some attention as it is usually undersize and will likely need a false shoulder. And if chamber is cut long then the described method is a safe bet.

Enjoy. My 2c.
 
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I have plenty of real magnums and am truly interested in this I would be utilizing a 24 inch barrel as I am not a short barrel guy anyhow the biggest question I really have I guess is how is feeding?
 
Feeding is good. Mid 2600's with 200gr Partition out of a 22" barrel (Remington 700 BDL rechambered). Forming brass can be a PITA, unless you like doing that stuff. Necking up Nosler's .280 AI brass does not work as shoulders/necks collapse/bulge no matter what you do. Dies are relatively expensive.

Overall the effort is not worth it, imo.
 
Feeding is not an issue for the Savage center feed platform as well. Some people appear to have feeding issues , cant really comment on that. I suppose it would depend on the action and mag option you are building on and perhaps push vs Controlled fed actions.
 
I would likely try and use 200 accubonds or 180 whatever in that range and I have lots of other dies to make false shoulders l may have to try this out as I know it's a pain but I'm a perpetual tinkerer
 
Feeding is good. Mid 2600's with 200gr Partition out of a 22" barrel (Remington 700 BDL rechambered). Forming brass can be a PITA, unless you like doing that stuff. Necking up Nosler's .280 AI brass does not work as shoulders/necks collapse/bulge no matter what you do. Dies are relatively expensive.

Overall the effort is not worth it, imo.

I tested a load in my brothers weatherby (24inch barrel) in just the standard 30-06 and I was able to obtain a tad over 2700 fps with a 200gr speer hot cor. If the OP want magnum performance he should get a 300 win mag IMO.
 
I tested a load in my brothers weatherby (24inch barrel) in just the standard 30-06 and I was able to obtain a tad over 2700 fps with a 200gr speer hot cor. If the OP want magnum performance he should get a 300 win mag IMO.

Depends on lots of factors. I was also able to get 2600 with the 220 Partition. But it's a wash really. Nothing will ever know the difference.
 
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