You are out to lunch Gate... being able to simply fire a factory round in an improved chamber is what makes it an improved cartridge. Been that way forever.
You are out to lunch Gate... being able to simply fire a factory round in an improved chamber is what makes it an improved cartridge. Been that way forever.
Handbook for shooters and reloaders P.O. Ackley
I can see the perspective from both sides, but what is "wildcatting" then?" If a non-OEM person "AI'ing" a case is not wildcatting, then is necking an existing case up or down wildcatting? Do you have to design a new case from scratch before you are creating a wildcat?
My own opinion is that if anyone not affiliated with an OEM makes a change to a cartridge case, they have created a wildcat. As for whether a factory round can be chambered, I would say it is not what goes into the chamber, but what comes out of the chamber that defines it. Once SAAMI or CIP recognize and standardize a "NEW" cartridge it ceases being a wildcat. People discuss cartridges all the time that "used to be" wildcats, they were novel when created (or improved), but have now been standardized and accepted. In my opinion the 280 AI "was" a wildcat, but is no longer a wildcat, the same can be said of most others. In more recent times, there have been partnerships between firearms and ammunition manufactures to bring a new cartridge to market along with the associated promotion (hype), given that there are R&D teams working on both sides, I would not consider the resulting cartridge to be a wildcat.
I can see the perspective from both sides, but what is "wildcatting" then?"
It's simple. There is no factory loaded ammunition made that you can chamber. (not just hard to find - but not made). The brass has to be custom made to be fired.
Necking cases up or down? Well obviously necking a 308 down to 7mm or .243 isn't. Necking a 30-06 to .22 would be. Improved versions are not and never have been a wildcat. Improved versions are designed to use a factory case. They have always had a factory parent case that would chamber to fire form the "improved" case.
It's simple. There is no factory loaded ammunition made that you can chamber. (not just hard to find - but not made). The brass has to be custom made to be fired.
Necking cases up or down? Well obviously necking a 308 down to 7mm or .243 isn't. Necking a 30-06 to .22 would be. Improved versions are not and never have been a wildcat. Improved versions are designed to use a factory case. They have always had a factory parent case that would chamber to fire form the "improved" case.
What did PO Ackley call them?
If we look at the firearms literature of the day, almost all of it describes AI cartridges as wildcats. Which makes sense really. If you wanted to use an improved cartridge you had to have your rifle rechambered and/or rebarreled, you had to form cases to fit your wildcat chamber and there was no recognized specifications for the cartridge.
That does seem to be the case.
Improved cartridges- no SAAMI specs, can't buy factory rifle so chambered, can't buy factory ammo that properly fits the chamber and you must form the brass to fit the chamber....Sounds like a wildcat to me.
Strictly a matter of "no SAAMI specs, no on the shelf ammo or rifles, need to form your own brass/have your chamber reamed"?
"Nah," was a post erasure, not a comment on your post.