- Location
- West coast of Vancouver Island
Guys, my comercial Ross has arrived, but the breech is marked 303 Ross. I am almost positive but I should ask, 303Ross = 303Brit right?
Guys, my comercial Ross has arrived, but the breech is marked 303 Ross. I am almost positive but I should ask, 303Ross = 303Brit right?
As Dantforth has pointed out, there were cartridges with Ross headstamps and packaging. One significantly different .303 Ross cartridge is the one intended for match shooting, which had a long streamlined bullet.
But your commercial Ross is designed to use standard .303 British ammunition. Which model is it?
I don't know. The receiver has the letter "P" inside a circle just below the 303 Ross stamp. I assume that it is one of the post-war sporters.
Up until the early 1960s, CIL ammo (Dominion) was marked on the boxes that it was suitable for rifles chambered for .303 Ross. There is no difference in the cartridges.
The Ross match ammunition had the famous Ross "pencil" bullet, as did the .280 Ross cartridge: wonderfully accurate, set new records all over the place. In actual fact, it looked a fair bit like a Hornady Spire point, just moreso.
I'm getting good results with Hornady Spire Point 150s in a couple of Rosses, but the best shooting I have come up with, to date, has been with the Sierra 180 flatbase at about 2300 ft/sec.
Your commercial 1905 is really a toy worth having and worth hanging onto. I do hope you have a LOT of fun with it.



























