No you can not check headspace without a least a steel go gauge made to the correct dimension.
If you use new brass cases or new ammunition or a fired and sized case you are not measuring headspace, you are measuring the amount of head clearance that piece of brass has in your chamber.
So which brass case manufacturer has the proper headspace?
a internet full of savage shooters still have both eyes and all their fingers, don't ever purchase a savage on the EE before you verify the barrel wasn't checked with clear tape, masking tape, or shim stock glued to a piece of brass...........I wouldn't trust this method on a Remington, heck I don't even trust remingtons.............oh and merry Christmas dennis
Exactly!The question asked wasn't about eyes and fingers, Savages or Remingtons...
it was about checking headspace... and checking headspace (which is a fixed dimension when the rifle is assembled) is done using steel gauges manufactured to an exact standard.
and have a good New Year too...
Just wondering if there is a way checking headspace with out go/no go gauges? Thanks.
bolt action or semi auto???
for a bolt action just to ruffle feathers........bolt should close on a full length sized case with 1 layer of green painters tape, should not close on same piece of brass with 2 layers of tape......not sure what kind of tape you have........well experiment with a rifle you know is good until you get the answer, then repeat the process with the rifle in question...........you can also glue the correct size pieces of shim stock to cases for future referrance..........
Headspace is not the gap between bolt and cartridge. It is the measurement of the cartridge where it is to stop in the chamber. The critical part of this article is 'Headspace is a critical consideration in any firearm. It should be checked by a competent person using the appropriate headspace gauges prior to using the firearm." [url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headspace_%28firearms%29
[/URL]
It is a given that the steel gauges will give you the "proper" SAAMI headspace specs. For someone in the "business", having a set of gauges is prudent however for lots of us "financial prudence" is a reality.
The fact that we don't shoot "steel gauges" in our guns...we shoot the shells that we buy or make In our dies...how can that not be equally as right for individual rifles as using gauges...the resized cases will fit our guns that we plan on using them in. Wildcatters have been fitting rifles to "modified cases" for eons, a factory or resized case is no different.
To take this further I think Dave's method gives me more info than a set of gauges will. The gauges are very good for "new chambering's", however for old, existing chambering's they only tell me if the bolt will close...not if the headsace has lengthened for any reason, where Daves method tells me if the headspace has changed and if so, how much.
Another method I use for testing headspace in every vintage lever gun I am going to shoot (mostly rimmed cartridges) is to take a hand full of empty brass, re-prime them and shoot them thru the gun. when you eject the cases you will see that the primer is protruding from the case. The amount the primer protrudes is the amount of space you have between the bolt face and cartridge face. Some people hesitate to call this "head space" but it is what it is...the space between both bolt head and cartridge head.
Using anything but steel go gauges is really measuring cartridge case head clearance and does not always result in a saami spec chamber. It also will not blow a gun up, but it isn't a correct standard.
The original post: Just wondering if there is a way checking headspace with out go/no go gauges? Thanks.