- Location
- Western Manitoba
Maybe you are the type that thinks if it fits, it must be okay to use, or perhaps think that it therefore must be correct, if it fits in there. Perhaps you go so far as to read headstamps, to be sure.

All four are head stamped “R-P 300 Win Mag”. All four are previously fired. The two on the left have bronze coloured primers still in - as if fired factory rounds - the two on the right have no primers - as if re-sized. They were all sold to me, here on CGN, as “300 Win Mag” - yet clearly they are different to each other. Very much an instance where using a brass case to decide what is the chambering, could end up in a goofy place! Have to actually measure the cases, first, to know what they are now - not what they were made as before firing and re-sizing (and trimming). Those two “short” ones, appear visually similar to some 308 Norma Magnum cases here, but their head stamp clearly says “R-P 300 Win Mag”. They might also have been made for a .30-338, or several other “short belted magnum” 30 caliber - has to be measured to know.

All four are head stamped “R-P 300 Win Mag”. All four are previously fired. The two on the left have bronze coloured primers still in - as if fired factory rounds - the two on the right have no primers - as if re-sized. They were all sold to me, here on CGN, as “300 Win Mag” - yet clearly they are different to each other. Very much an instance where using a brass case to decide what is the chambering, could end up in a goofy place! Have to actually measure the cases, first, to know what they are now - not what they were made as before firing and re-sizing (and trimming). Those two “short” ones, appear visually similar to some 308 Norma Magnum cases here, but their head stamp clearly says “R-P 300 Win Mag”. They might also have been made for a .30-338, or several other “short belted magnum” 30 caliber - has to be measured to know.