- Location
- Western Manitoba
Perhaps to reinforce why not to use someone's random hand loads in someone else's random rifle??
I have three M1917 based rifles - all chambered for 30-06 - and I want to try to develop one common loading for them. I found some extremes, I think? I used a flat tip insert on a cleaning rod to touch the closed bolt face - and marked the cleaning rod at the muzzle - then I used a wood dowel to press a bullet into the lands from the bolt end of the barrel - and again marked that cleaning rod as it just so touched the tip of that bullet. Then measured the distance between the two marks.
One rifle is a pretty much all "W" parts, with the "W" barrel marked "11-18" - so made in November 1918 - that one was pretty much 3.300", exactly. So, to set up for the common .030" "jump" to start, I would have loaded up at a COAL of 3.270"
A "middle" one has a brand new, never fired "High Standard" barrel as used for the WWII re-builds by USA arsenals in early part of WWII. It was slightly shorter than the "W" barrel above - I got 3.295" - ish. So far, pretty close.
Then a Remington Model 30 - the Remington code on the barrel says it was made in 1926. Same bullet, same process - that one is 3.240" when tight to the lands. I have done this one twice - different bullets from same box - and my measurements are within about 0.001"- 0.002" of each other.
So the comfortable .030" jump in the "W" barrel, would have been about .030" jam into the lands on the Model 30. If I had worked up "warm" loads for the "W" barrel at that COAL, then most likely would have been bad news in the Model 30, if I could have even chambered those rounds.
I thought that I would share what I discovered - I was not expecting that great of difference, one extreme chamber to another.
P.S. I do have a fourth and a fifth 30-06 rifle here - a 1955 Winchester Model 70 and a STIGA sporter - using process described above, I get 3.325" and 3.320 respectively!! This was done with Hornady 150 grain flat base spitzer Interlock bullet - #3031. So, a COAL worked out for this Model 70 or the STIGA , with a .030" jump, would be REALLY bad news in that Remington Model 30.
I have three M1917 based rifles - all chambered for 30-06 - and I want to try to develop one common loading for them. I found some extremes, I think? I used a flat tip insert on a cleaning rod to touch the closed bolt face - and marked the cleaning rod at the muzzle - then I used a wood dowel to press a bullet into the lands from the bolt end of the barrel - and again marked that cleaning rod as it just so touched the tip of that bullet. Then measured the distance between the two marks.
One rifle is a pretty much all "W" parts, with the "W" barrel marked "11-18" - so made in November 1918 - that one was pretty much 3.300", exactly. So, to set up for the common .030" "jump" to start, I would have loaded up at a COAL of 3.270"
A "middle" one has a brand new, never fired "High Standard" barrel as used for the WWII re-builds by USA arsenals in early part of WWII. It was slightly shorter than the "W" barrel above - I got 3.295" - ish. So far, pretty close.
Then a Remington Model 30 - the Remington code on the barrel says it was made in 1926. Same bullet, same process - that one is 3.240" when tight to the lands. I have done this one twice - different bullets from same box - and my measurements are within about 0.001"- 0.002" of each other.
So the comfortable .030" jump in the "W" barrel, would have been about .030" jam into the lands on the Model 30. If I had worked up "warm" loads for the "W" barrel at that COAL, then most likely would have been bad news in the Model 30, if I could have even chambered those rounds.
I thought that I would share what I discovered - I was not expecting that great of difference, one extreme chamber to another.
P.S. I do have a fourth and a fifth 30-06 rifle here - a 1955 Winchester Model 70 and a STIGA sporter - using process described above, I get 3.325" and 3.320 respectively!! This was done with Hornady 150 grain flat base spitzer Interlock bullet - #3031. So, a COAL worked out for this Model 70 or the STIGA , with a .030" jump, would be REALLY bad news in that Remington Model 30.
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