Anyone using 9.3X62 maximum plus loads?

Why not?

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As most of you know, I have been loading and hunting with the 9.3 x 62 for more than 40 years, and posted quite a bit about the cartridge. My load has always been around 2300 fps with 286 gr bullets. Have lost count of how many animals have been put in the freezer with that load. Literally tons of meat.

Most have been taken using plain vanilla cup and core bullets, everything we have up here from grouse to grizzlies. Almost all were taken with a single shot. 🙂

Today I took another look at the loads published in the Nosler Reloading manual, and they all seem to be around the same velocity using their partition of the same weight.


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I see loads published in several threads by guys using loads close to 200 ft./s faster with this and other bullets. Any of you using loads that powerful?

Ted
 
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RL-17 is supposed to be magical for the 9.3x62 velocity wise. In the past I used Varget (don't recall at the moment exact grains , 58.5-59.5? grains) with a 286 grain Privi bullet for an easy 2,450 fps. I'm sure there was more to be had, but that's where I stopped. The important thing to remember in a modern rifle, is bolt thrust on a specific size bolt face is what matters, IMHO. If you can wind out a 270 Win to 60,000 psi (270, 30/06, 9.3 etc same case basically) why not the others? That's where my head is at.

Edit to add

The charge was 58.5 grains Varget, but also a 24" barrel.
 
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Do you think this is one of those situations where the 9.3x62 is such an old cartridge that in modern firearms it can tolerate much higher pressures than the old guns and old brass?

Brass is always going to be the first part that fails and in a modern rifle you can certainly work up until you see pressure signs in brass (or the chroonograph) and back off.

Also with newer powders is the data for such an old cartridge even keeping up? Maybe there is a new miracle powder for that chambering, but I doubt any companies are doing much pressure testing for it.
 
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I wouldn't go crazy with Partitions due to the different construction, most manuals have them running a little lower due to this, kind of like the solid coppers.
I've hit 2500fps with PRVI 286gr, it's miserable to shoot lol, not gonna soft ball it, 60gr Varget, I dropped down to 55gr Varget, still awesome and not as miserable.
 
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I wouldn't go crazy with Partitions due to the different construction, most manuals have them running a little lower due to this, kind of like the solid coppers.
I've hit 2500fps with PRVI 286gr, it's miserable to shoot lol, not gonna soft ball it, 60gr Varget, I dropped down to 55gr Varget, still awesome and not as miserable.
It does get a little punchy/angry when you start winding it out that's for sure.
 
If a barreled action can handle 60,000 psi loads in a 270 Winchester rifle, it can also handle the same pressure in a 9.3X62 rifle.

Whether the rifleman can handle the substantially increased recoil is another thing.

As well, the increased recoil will be leaning much harder on the stock.

Ted
 
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That’s why I asked. No wonder it’s brutal! An eight pound rifle generating just under 4000 foot pounds of energy is not kidding.

It’s getting your attention!

Ted
Mine doesn't really have a recoil pad either lol.
I feel like I should be wearing a mouth guard when I shoot it, kinda rattles the teeth lol
Can't argue with how it shoots, my friends don't like it much, 1 round is enough.
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Here’s my latest sight-in check at 100 yards, yesterday afternoon.

PRVI 286 gr ahead of 58 gr of CF 8506 and CCI 200 primers . Adjusted scope up three inches and left three quarters on an inch.

Ready for anything we have here with dead on hold to 200 yards.

Ted
 

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Most of my loads are running around 2450 with a 285 gr bullet. This is flirting with the original ballistics for the .375 H&H. Whether the extra 100 fps is really making a difference is debatable, but it makes the holdovers easy to remember. I zero at 175, 3" of drop at 200, 6" at 250, and a foot low at 300.

Factory loads of the same weight seem to run 2280-2300. I've never had one live up to the 2350 claim.

It's not a lot of fun to shoot over the bench, but field positions are no worse than a heavily loaded shotgun.

As already mentioned, if a given rifle can handle .270 pressures then there's no reason ( beyond shooter comfort) not to load the 9.3 to the same pressure.

The loads listed in the Nosler manual tend to run about 60 fps slower in my rifle, probably because of throat length.
 
Yes I’m running 250gr Accubonds at 2720 fps, before you all scream over pressure I’m using the max charge of N540 from Vhitavuori’s website
This is out of a 24” Shaw barrel
So far it’s been very accurate,
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