Hello Gunsmith Thread Readers
I intend to contact the builder of this rifle but since its Christmas and I'll have to wait for that, I thought I'd post my problem here and see what you think. Here's the scoop.
I bought a very nice rebarrelled Ruger #1 in 22PPC. I bought it unfired with the new barrel although the rifle did have a past life in another chambering. I was preparing some reloads to do a barrel break-in and I used an RCBS full length resizing die on some used cases. The die was properly set to make gentle but firm contact with the shell holder at the peak of the press travel. Now here's my problem; the sized cases will not go far enough into the chamber to close the action. I would say that the rim protrudes .030" to .040" past the end of the chamber. I tried some handloads that came with the rifle and the action still wouldn't close. I tried some Sako factory loads and they will chamber - snug but the breechblock will close. I only tried this on one cartridge. So here's a list of questions:
- Should I be worried that the rifle needs some surgery to correct headspace? Is it possible that an error was made and it's out of spec? If an error exists, who would be accountable, the barrel maker or the gunsmith who fitted the barrel to the action?
- Could it be that the barrel (McLelland I think, have to check) has a match chamber and the tolerances between it and the RCBS die results in a no-fit situation? Should I see the sizing die as the problem and not the gun? I would assume that reloading dies are conservative and made to size cases so that they will feed into any chamber that meets spec.
- Do I have to look at buying some match grade 22PPC dies (Redding?) with those inserts that allow me to bump the shoulder until it's just right? I was planning on buying neck sizing dies but I need a full length resizing die regardless. I'd rather pay for dies then for remachining the chamber.
- Is this problem typical for customized rifles fitted with match barrels?
Thanks for any insights you can post. I was looking forward to taking it out for a break-in but looks like it has to sit in the safe instead while I figure this out.
I intend to contact the builder of this rifle but since its Christmas and I'll have to wait for that, I thought I'd post my problem here and see what you think. Here's the scoop.
I bought a very nice rebarrelled Ruger #1 in 22PPC. I bought it unfired with the new barrel although the rifle did have a past life in another chambering. I was preparing some reloads to do a barrel break-in and I used an RCBS full length resizing die on some used cases. The die was properly set to make gentle but firm contact with the shell holder at the peak of the press travel. Now here's my problem; the sized cases will not go far enough into the chamber to close the action. I would say that the rim protrudes .030" to .040" past the end of the chamber. I tried some handloads that came with the rifle and the action still wouldn't close. I tried some Sako factory loads and they will chamber - snug but the breechblock will close. I only tried this on one cartridge. So here's a list of questions:
- Should I be worried that the rifle needs some surgery to correct headspace? Is it possible that an error was made and it's out of spec? If an error exists, who would be accountable, the barrel maker or the gunsmith who fitted the barrel to the action?
- Could it be that the barrel (McLelland I think, have to check) has a match chamber and the tolerances between it and the RCBS die results in a no-fit situation? Should I see the sizing die as the problem and not the gun? I would assume that reloading dies are conservative and made to size cases so that they will feed into any chamber that meets spec.
- Do I have to look at buying some match grade 22PPC dies (Redding?) with those inserts that allow me to bump the shoulder until it's just right? I was planning on buying neck sizing dies but I need a full length resizing die regardless. I'd rather pay for dies then for remachining the chamber.
- Is this problem typical for customized rifles fitted with match barrels?
Thanks for any insights you can post. I was looking forward to taking it out for a break-in but looks like it has to sit in the safe instead while I figure this out.