9.3x57

Rob

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You'd think that with all the dirt cheap 9.3x57 Swedish rifles now available, someone would start importing factory ammo for them.
 
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I meant someone currrently in business.

Google fu says Vancouver Gun Shop has it in stock... store pick up only.

I'd advise contacting your friendly neighbourhood dealer to bring some in, or else reload.
 
...or else reload.

I reloaded for the 9.3x57 back in the 80's. Succesfully hunted deer and bear with it too. But after four decades of reloading everything from .22 Hornet to .375 H&H, a few years ago I gave up reloading and sold my equipment. No time for it anymore. Too many other interests. So I am only using factory ammo these days.
 
I am with MiG25 inso far as the reloading part. I think what I ended up with was a TradeEx thing - is Husqvarna 9.3x57 barrel - now fitted to a different Husqvarna receiver. Have never seen 9.3x57 ammo for sale at any price here in Manitoba - so re-forming them from 8x57 PPU brass - seems to work. Could not find head space gauges. If I recall, Norma and CIP data give different dimensions - maybe original stuff was lost in time. But I did get Hornady "Custom Grade" dies for it - seated that barrel and re-formed brass in those dies - made them to fit to each other - might not be to any exact standard, but I call it a 9.3x57, even though the Husqvarna barrel is marked "9.3 mm", and the brass that I formed for it is head stamped "PPU 8 mm Mauser".

Is at least one other CGN'r from Manitoba is (or was) doing the same thing - but I do not know what he used for parent brass. Another CGN'r from Yukon provided terrific advice and leads to other advice for how to do that case forming. I can now fire that one - and am still keeping an eye out for factory ammo.
 
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I reloaded for the 9.3x57 back in the 80's. Succesfully hunted deer and bear with it too. But after four decades of reloading everything from .22 Hornet to .375 H&H, a few years ago I gave up reloading and sold my equipment. No time for it anymore. Too many other interests. So I am only using factory ammo these days.

If it must be factory I would find a local store that can order it and wait. It's gotta be in the pipe somewhere because some places do or did have it.
 
I bought 9.3 x57 dies from Eagle firearms. Reformed 8x57 brass with those dies. Fired first with a light cast load and used jacketed bullets after than for a hunting round. I find it rare to find 9.3 x 57 brass.
 
JJ-65 - I have had a very hard time to find reputable loading data for 9.3x57 - I think it is a very anemic loading - perhaps Norma has it correct? What I found is CIP used both crusher and peiziometric systems to set their standards - I could not find any SAAMI standards for 9.3x57 - CIP sets 38,000 psi for Crusher method and 44,000 psi for Peizio method - using CIP procedures - as their Maximum pressures - I presume Maximum Average pressure, but do not know that - perhaps they mean Maximum Peak pressure? I have a copy of VihtaVuori Oy Reloading Guide 4th Edition - it lists 9.3x57 with 255 grain bullets - 2,260 fps - at 37,710 psi - apparently VV uses the CIP standards - so led me to think that a 9.3x57 was an anemic loading, by design. Can you direct me to other data?
 
I am with MiG25 inso far as the reloading part. I think what I ended up with was a TradeEx thing - is Husqvarna 9.3x57 barrel - now fitted to a different Husqvarna receiver. Have never seen 9.3x57 ammo for sale at any price here in Manitoba - so re-forming them from 8x57 PPU brass - seems to work. Could not find head space gauges. If I recall, Norma and CIP data give different dimensions - maybe original stuff was lost in time. But I did get Hornady "Custom Grade" dies for it - seated that barrel and re-formed brass in those dies - made them to fit to each other - might not be to any exact standard, but I call it a 9.3x57, even though the Husqvarna barrel is marked "9.3 mm", and the brass that I formed for it is head stamped "PPU 8 mm Mauser".

Is at least one other CGN'r from Manitoba is (or was) doing the same thing - but I do not know what he used for parent brass. Another CGN'r from Yukon provided terrific advice and leads to other advice for how to do that case forming. I can now fire that one - and am still keeping an eye out for factory ammo.

i think the why not? is the one resident from yukon that may have helped you. he did the same for my wife 9.3x57.
 
Yes, that was he - glad to hear the advice also worked well for another person!! I had actually made my own "punch" to go into a Lee Universal Case Expanding Die - to take the 8x57 brass from 9.3 mm to nearly straight wall, before I acquired actual 41 Mag dies for that step - then incrementally brought back that 9.3x57 shoulder until my bolt just so closes on the brass in this chamber - I know there is NO excessive headspace prior to fire-forming - I do not have actual headspace gauges to verify that chamber with, anyways.
 
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howard2 Good information! Unfortunately for me I do not have any VV or Norma powder to try any of those loads. Any idea what sort of bullet weights or velocities that they were publishing??
 

Yes - but as was mentioned in that thread - can re-chamber a 9.3x57 to 9.3x62 - but many Swede rifles on M96 receivers will not have magazines long enough for factory 9.3x62 cartridges. Does not seem to be an issue for M98 receivers though - Husqvarna and others in Sweden used both sizes for their rifles. Is more than extending the magazine - also likely have to remove material behind the lower locking lug recess and re-do the feed ramp - but, can be done - I have a STIGA rifle built on a M96 receiver - those mods were done to make it accept 30-06 cartridges, but was then proof tested in Denmark, by the maker.
 
I reloaded for the 9.3x57 back in the 80's. Succesfully hunted deer and bear with it too. But after four decades of reloading everything from .22 Hornet to .375 H&H, a few years ago I gave up reloading and sold my equipment. No time for it anymore. Too many other interests. So I am only using factory ammo these days.

Well then you probably should have gotten rid of your reloader-only cartridges when you got out of reloading.

9.3x57 ammo exists, but by the time you buy 3 or 4 boxes you'd be better off selling that rifle and buying a 9.3x62, where factory ammo is much easier to find and far more affordable.
 
P-miner. Good luck finding useful loading data for the 57. Now that you have the headspace on virgins figured out, just go with 52grs of R-15 and a 250gr Nosler AB in Norma brass. This load is fine in any Scandihovian Mauser, primer pockets stay tighter than a hawks a$$ in a power dive and the energy level is up where the 9.3x62 was when it was first introduced.
 
JJ-65 - that is colourful description that you give - but that loading is within one grain what Nosler gives for a maximum for a 35 Whelen with 250 grain bullets. Where did you get that one from?? SAAMI sets max pressure for 35 Whelen at 62,000 psi - your load must be close to that?? Is a long way from CIP 38,000 psi for 9.3x57 ???

I have no need to "push" a cartridge into something it is not meant to be - I do have a 9.3x62, which I do load with 250 Accubond and healthy loading of Varget - the loading that I use was apparently pressure tested at Western Powder labs in Montana (not by me), to not exceed SAAMI 30-06 level - which does exceed 9.3x62 levels. By 2,000 psi using CIP piezo test procedures - 57 kpsi versus 59 kpsi - so, technically, I guess that I am "pushing" my 9.3x62.

I also worked up to what I consider a "good" loading with 286 grain Partitions and 285 PPU - and Big Game powder, and have some 320 grain Woodleigh Weldcore yet to be attended to - I did receive information from a Woodleigh manual for them though - looks like Varget is a recommended powder - for velocity, anyways. The 250 grain Accubond and 286 Partition loads that I worked up to, are on page 391 of "The Big Book of Gun Gack: The Hunter's Guide to Handloading Smokeless Rifle Cartridges" - by John Barsness, published in 2015. He is the guy who had some of his loadings to be pressure tested by/at the Western Powder lab. Same page, he used Big Game powder with those 320 grain Woodleigh - so is two powders for me to try ...
 
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P Miner. I worked up to the 52 gr load. Same as I do with any wildcat cartridge. The brass will last damn near forever at that pressure level. You are seemingly determined to pole vault over a mouse turd, but that seems to be your thing ???
 
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