Part II
OK, remember from the above post that Headspace Dimensions can be taken from both the U.S. Government Arsenals and/or SAAMI specifications? Before I go further I want to add that the dimensions might APPEAR to be different between them when you only look at the listed length dimensions. This is really important and caused quite a ruckus a few years ago when SAinc. started writing down the headspace on a tag they attached to the M1 Garand rifles they built with commercial receivers. The Headspace readings they wrote down were hugely different from the normal readings we see from Government Gages or from Gages made to Government specs. That FREAKED OUT a whole bunch of folks because they thought the barrels had been improperly cut for Headspace. When I first ran across this, I used my Government Gages that had been calibrated and found the SAinc. headspace was fine – as I figured it would be. SAinc. used gages that had the SAAMI spec reading on them and that’s why the readings were different.
SAAMI gages in .30-06 have a different length reading because they are measured to a different Datum line on the angled shoulder of the gage. The angle is different than G.I. gages, BUT that doesn’t mean a problem, it merely means the Datum Point is in a different area on the gage. Since chamber reamers are also standardized, the chambers are going to be cut close to the same no matter who makes the reamer. Not everyone has run across this or may have even heard about it, so I thought it was important to mention this as it may be something someone might run into on a M1 Garand or even a M14. I’m not sure if SAAMI length readings are different for .308/7.62mm and never saw them listed differently than how the government gages were listed, but if you run across this, just check them with regular gages and know the rifles will be fine when they pass headspace inspection with regular Gages.
Now it’s time to switch to another widely held misconception or myth about headspace on both M14’s and M1 Garands that are chambered in .308 or 7.62mm. These two calibers are pretty close to being the same with the main difference being the angle of the shoulder of the cartridge case, BUT they are NOT the same caliber. 7.62mm Nato ammo also has a slightly longer throat dimension than .308 Win.
Headspace lengths for caliber .308 Winchester
1.630" GO
1.634" NO GO
1.638" FIELD REJECT
The G.I. Headspace Gage lengths for 7.62mm
Go Gage...................................... 1.6355"
NO Go Gage................................ 1.6375"
Rebuild Maximum Gage.............. 1.6415"
Field Reject Gage....................... 1.6455"
NOTE: The information on Government Headspace Gage lengths was taken directly from the 3-5 Tech Manual and the Rebuild Standards manual published by Rock Island Arsenal.
Also, I would like to explain that "Rebuild Maximum Gage" reading of 1.6415". That is MY descriptive term for it because the Rock Island Arsenal Rebuild standards just list it as one of the three gages (by length) to be used for rebuild of real, G.I. M14's. Remember that Headspace should only grow at most one to two thousandths of an inch during the entire life of a barrel? If it goes much beyond that, you have a REAL problem with either the bolt or the receiver, or both. So, when they rebuilt rifles to 5th Echelon - Depot Repair Standards, they used 1.6415" as the maximum to ENSURE the barrel would not have a headspace problem during the entire life of a barrel. That “Rebuild Maximum Gage” ensures there is at least THREE thousandths of an inch less than the Field Reject of 1.6445", so there would almost never be a problem with Maximum Safe Headspace while the barrel was still good.
When we chambered (cut the Headspace) on real, G.I. NM M14 barrels for competition shooting in the Marine Corps, we used .308 Headspace Gages and chamber reamers. We used both NM G.I. Government “White Box” 7.62mm ammo and a proprietary Federal “NM type” .308 loaded ammo that has come to be called “Federal Gold Medal Match” in recent years. Everyone who doesn’t know should understand that NM ammo is loaded about 200 FPS LOWER and doesn’t develop quite as much chamber pressure as regular 7.62mm Nato ammo. Some NM Armorers in the Marine Corps (as well as some of the other Armed Forces NM Armorers) didn’t understand back in the early 1970’s that you can’t cut the chamber dimensions to a Minimum .308 Win. Headspace length and have both types of ammo perform properly in a Gas Operated Rifle. You can often, if not usually get away with it in a Bolt Action rifle, but NOT a “Gas Gun” as we called the M14. The reason for that is when you reload for a Bolt Gun, you only have to resize the neck. The expanded fired case will still chamber well in a Bolt Gun because of the mechanical advantage of the bolt action RAMMING the cartridge in the chamber. In a Gas Gun when you reload, you HAVE to resize the whole cartridge case or it won’t feed properly and will often get stuck in some chambers before the cartridge is fully seated. So in the real world, what did we find you have to do to chamber an M14 with NM 7.62mm ammo?
At first, we chambered NM M14’s pretty much the same way that NM M1903 rifles and other NM Bolt Action rifles had been chambered for decades. We chambered them as close to the minimum .308 Headspace length of 1.630” as possible. We also used Elliot Headspace Reamers that were absolutely the Ultimate Quality reamers in the 60’s and 70’s. These reamers were on the “tight side” of manufacturing tolerances. (Today, Clymer’s .308 Match Reamer gives a similarly tight NM chamber.) The Lake City, “White Box,” NM 7.62mm ammo in both 168 grain and 173 grain bullet loadings would function OK in most rifles, but not in all of them and not as accurately as we thought they should have with so tight of a chamber. We found that the rifles performed better and more accurately when chambered to between 1.631” and 1.633” when using NM 7.62mm ammo. Why was that? Well, look up above at the minimum chamber length for a 7.62mm GO Gage. That reading is 1.6335” for Nato Spec Ammo. We actually found it was better to ream Headspace a bit deeper before the answer hit us in a “No Scheit Sherlock” moment. What we did by lengthening the Headspace was to get it close to or right at the minimum 7.62mm chamber length even when using lower pressure NM ammo. So in the real world, it also shows up there is a difference between .308 and 7.62mm chambers. Well, that’s fine for NM or target grade barrels, but what about standard chambered rifle barrels?
Standard 7.62mm Nato ammo and ESPECIALLY foreign surplus ammo may or may not be held to true Nato specifications. One thing for sure is that standard 7.62mm ammo manufacturing specifications allows for a slightly longer cartridge case (and slightly longer neck) than .308 Winchester. Some Nato spec ammo like the really good Portugese 7.62mm Nato ammo is also a bit on the “hot” side of the 7.62mm range and that means slightly higher chamber pressures from the “Get Go.” So what does that mean in “the real world?”
If after reading all these posts on headspace you only remember two things, it is my most fervent hope you will remember these two things:
1. Do NOT use standard Nato Spec surplus ammo in a rifle chambered with a NM chamber and set up at the minimum headspace. Even if the rifle functions with no apparent problems, the chamber pressure of each round fired is significantly more than in a proper Nato Spec chamber. What you are doing is subjecting your bolt and receiver to more abuse and it will AT LEAST cause your bolt and receiver to wear out faster. If the cartridge case brass alloy of some of the questionable foreign surplus is used, you are also asking for cartridge case ruptures and gas and pieces of brass coming back into your face and possibly into your eyes.
2. If you are shooting 7.62mm ammo in a rifle chambered for .308 Winchester and the ammo does not feed and function properly and/or if the ammo has a greater “kick” or much louder noise than usual; PLEASE stop firing that ammo in your rifle. Now, this sounds like it should be a common sense reaction, but I have seen and heard of WAY too many people who continue to fire ammo that does these things. At a local range about 20 years ago, I was next to a guy who kept shooting some junk 7.62mm ammo is his M1A and about every 7th or 8th round wouldn’t chamber or he had trouble extracting the cartridge case. I warned him about the possible ramifications of firing that ammo, but he ignored the warnings. OK, I got up and moved all my stuff to the shooting bench the furthest away from him as I could and waited to shoot when he wasn’t shooting. He asked me why I moved and I told him I didn’t want to be close to that rifle when the cartridge case ruptured or his rifle broke and pieces of metal came flying off the rifle. He again ignored me and went back to shooting the rifle because, “I didn’t know what I was talking about.” Yep, he eventually ruined his bolt and receiver from firing that junk 7.62mm ammo, though fortunately in his case no one got hurt. God seems to sometimes protect even the worst idiots from their own bad actions at times.
OK, so CAN a rifle be chambered so that both .308 Winchester and GOOD 7.62mm Nato Ammo be fired in it without problems? The good news is yes it can. Most factories who make or fully assemble their rifles chamber them so you CAN shoot both, but it is not absolutely certain in every rifle and with every type of 7.62mm Nato Ammo. Please see Number 2. above.
Now, the GREAT thing is that if a rifle is chambered so that the bolt correctly closes on a 7.62mm GO gage at 1.6355" and does not close on either a 7.62mm NO GO gage of 1.6375" or the .308 Field Reject of 1.638" - then there are absolutely no worries about shooting either .308 nor 7.62mm in the rifle. This is how I chamber Garands and semi auto M14's for folks who want to shoot both .308 and 7.62mm surplus. (I chamber them so the bolt won't close around 1.635" to 1.636".)
If you use .308 Winchester Headspace gages, exclusively, you can still chamber the rifle correctly for 7.62mm as well. You want the bolt to just close without friction on the NO GO gage. That will ensure you have the minimum for 7.62mm and not too much headspace for the .308 at 1.638".
OK, that’s enough for this post. Stay tuned as more is coming folks. Grin.