A word of caution, with 'headspace type' problems most notably in Lee Enfield actions, check it over good before you purchase. The possible stretch from some of these rifles could considerably reduce the case life.
And I have 303 brass that I have fired 5 times and still ready for another. All about how you hold your mouth, I guess. I don't go for max, and I dedicate rounds per rifle so I don't need to F/L resize, and I anneal every three loadings."Brass life" and "303 British" are not words that should be used in the same sentence, unless "brass life" is preceded by "bad to non-existent".
When shooting full house loads, I get 2 or 3 firings out of virgin brass in my 303's. Reduced/low pressure loads and partial/neck-sizing improve this situation somewhat, but not so much as you might think.
Compare that to my 308 Winchester's - I have brass that's probably pushing 15+ firings, and still going strong.
So, in that light, truely "once-fired" 303 Brit brass should be worth a premium, because the market for it would be large.![]()
And I have 303 brass that I have fired 5 times and still ready for another. All about how you hold your mouth, I guess. I don't go for max, and I dedicate rounds per rifle so I don't need to F/L resize, and I anneal every three loadings.
Well, that is true, however, being that most of mine are #4's or #5's, I don't have a headspace problem. I replaced all the bold heads, adn had my #1 barrel set back. I apologize for not reading your response deep enough. I am unsure, though,why anyone would want to continue to shoot a firearm with a known headspace problem. Yeah, that'll be hard on brass.Yeah, I've occasionally made 5 or 6 when using lower pressure loads and neck sizing (180's at 2200FPS using Win 760). But still - compare that with 15+ in my 308's, and it doesn't look all that good to me.
Or, to put it another way - other that in one rifle I used to have that had a headspace problem, I have NEVER worn out any 308 brass, but I am always scrounging 303 brass because my last batch is half gone or more.
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"Brass life" and "303 British" are not words that should be used in the same sentence, unless "brass life" is preceded by "bad to non-existent".
When shooting full house loads, I get 2 or 3 firings out of virgin brass in my 303's. Reduced/low pressure loads and partial/neck-sizing improve this situation somewhat, but not so much as you might think.
Compare that to my 308 Winchester's - I have brass that's probably pushing 15+ firings, and still going strong.
So, in that light, truely "once-fired" 303 Brit brass should be worth a premium, because the market for it would be large.![]()