Pull the bullet and measure. Very year I have check are .3105wow this is cool, sounds like people are having some good results.
but i measured about 100rnds of my Czech surplus 7.62x39 of both 1963 and '68 year manufactured and all i got was .308 dia. bullets
My norinco silver box is .3112. My Cz corrosive stuff is .3106 from 2 different crates. Close enough for me.Pull the bullet and measure. Very year I have check are .3105
I have never used Norinco, as it is NC, and I paid retails for it.My norinco silver box is .3112. My Cz corrosive stuff is .3106 from 2 different crates. Close enough for me.
What can you do with the primed 7.62x39 casings left behind ? Can you make 7.62x39 CB rounds ? Or load some birdshots and kill small creatures at very close range ?
I had the same question and then thought that there was no reason not to load a cast bullet with your fav powder in there... I would think that it is best to start at the bottom of the load data and work up as always, but it should be fine as long as your press can seat the bullet and add a little crimp if needed.
I have never used Norinco, as it is NC, and I paid retails for it.
The thing you need to be concerned about is the neck clearance. If the bullet is large enough in diameter that it "pinches" the neck when chambered, pressures will soar. I've never run into an SKS with a tight chamber. If the bullet you want to use will slide easily into a round fired in your gun, you will be fine.
0.312" or 0.315" round balls tapped into the case mouth to the halfway point, over 2 grs of Bullseye or 4 grs of Unique would be the ticket. Might cost a nickel a round. The ball weighs about 50 grs and will have a MV of about 1000 fps - I've done this is a 32RF (with less powder). If you tried this in the SKS, it will function as a single shot. No perceivable recoil, exceptionally quiet, so, so 100 yd accuracy.