budman
You don't need to take your Enfield rifle to a gunsmith to check your headspace, now I'm going to show you how to make the cheap bastards headspace gauge and all you need is a vernier caliper.
1. Take a new unfired case or a full length resized case and measure its length and write it down.
2. Next take a fired spent primer and start it into the primer pocket with just finger pressure.
3. Now chamber this case and slowly close the bolt and use the bolt face to seat the primer as the bolt is fully closed. Remove the case and measure the case again and write it down. your head clearance.
4. Now subtract the first case measurement from the second, and this will be your head clearance or the air space between the bolt and the rear of the case.
5. Now measure you rim thickness and add it to your head clearance measurement and this will be your actual headspace.
Military headspace is
minimum .064
maximum .074
Civilian GO gauge .064
Civilian NO-GO .067
NOTE: as an example the average rim thickness is .058 and if your actual headspace is .067 you will have .009 head clearance. This .009 is more than a new factory rifle will have so fire forming your cases and letting them headspace on the shoulder will improve case life greatly. And since bolt heads are getting hard to find and need to be fitted properly most of the time your better off keeping the one that came withe rifle as long as do not have bolt head over rotation and the headspace is over .074.
I have headspace gauges but they are not needed if you use the above method.
You don't need to take your Enfield rifle to a gunsmith to check your headspace, now I'm going to show you how to make the cheap bastards headspace gauge and all you need is a vernier caliper.
1. Take a new unfired case or a full length resized case and measure its length and write it down.
2. Next take a fired spent primer and start it into the primer pocket with just finger pressure.
3. Now chamber this case and slowly close the bolt and use the bolt face to seat the primer as the bolt is fully closed. Remove the case and measure the case again and write it down. your head clearance.
4. Now subtract the first case measurement from the second, and this will be your head clearance or the air space between the bolt and the rear of the case.
5. Now measure you rim thickness and add it to your head clearance measurement and this will be your actual headspace.
Military headspace is
minimum .064
maximum .074
Civilian GO gauge .064
Civilian NO-GO .067
NOTE: as an example the average rim thickness is .058 and if your actual headspace is .067 you will have .009 head clearance. This .009 is more than a new factory rifle will have so fire forming your cases and letting them headspace on the shoulder will improve case life greatly. And since bolt heads are getting hard to find and need to be fitted properly most of the time your better off keeping the one that came withe rifle as long as do not have bolt head over rotation and the headspace is over .074.
I have headspace gauges but they are not needed if you use the above method.


















































