Some thoughts on the 455 S&W Hand Ejector Model 2 and bore diameter

Tudenom

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Hi guys, here are some thoughts I'd like to pass by you on the .455 cartridge and my investigations into my Smith and Wesson 455 Eley Hand Ejector Model 2.

I've slugged the barrel three times on my S&W and the largest diameter I can measure on the slug is .450 diameter. The slug gets most of the way down the barrel and then shoots out of the forcing cone as I expect it should.

I've pulled a lead Fiocci and a lead Dominion bullet and have measured .452 and .450 respectively, even a Kynoch jacketed bullet I have measures .452.

Now I've been doing some looking around and found an interesting article on the very confusing history of the .455 cartridge and found this little tid-bit:

Once upon a time (actually in the late 1860s), in a country called England, the government of the day faced a dilemma. Here they were stuck with a whole bunch of percussion pistols while the rest of the world had discovered self-contained ammunition. Many of these were the Adams revolver in 54 bore and the decision was made to convert these Adams "Cap and Ball" revolvers to fire a metallic self-contained cartridge. As a 54-bore pistol is essentially .450 caliber, the cartridge designed to be used in converted revolvers was the .450 Boxer which became the .450 Adams Mk 1.

http://cartridgecollectors.org/455/introto455.htm

As it turns out the 450 Adams cartridge was really wimpy and was outdated pretty much right off the start so the British government decided to go bigger and Enfield developed a .455 revolver. But unfortunately the .455 Enfield was approved before a proper .455 cartridge was approved. So as a stop gap measure they ended up using the older and wimpier .450 Adams. In the meantime the Enfield .455 Revolver was updated to a .476 diameter cartridge and the true .455 cartridge was skipped entirely. The new Enfield ".455" cartridge was really a .476 bullet stuffed into a .455'ish case and looked rediculous, very much like a very small #####.

Years went by and technology improved so the Brits once again decided to update their revolver, this time one chambered in a true .455 cartridge. This time the Webley Mk1 won the contract. Once again there were supply issues and the true .455 Webley cartridge was not available. Obviously the old .476 round wouldn't fit so as a stop gap measure they once again resorted to using the now even older and wimpier .450 ADAMS which was still widely available. I think this is why Webleys are marked the way they are (i.e. 450-455 Webley) and are built the way they are (the forcing cone is .450 in diameter while the barrel is .455 in diameter). I think this is also the reason why .455 bullets are hollow based since they have to pass through a small hole and then expand to fill the rifling of the bigger diameter barrel.

I'm really starting to wonder if the .455 was ever really produced as a real .455 diameter bullet! Now you've got a whole whack load of Webley's out there with a .450 forcing cone so people could use the .450 Adams in their revolvers, does it make sense to make ammo (especially jacketed ammo) 5 thou bigger than the forcing cone diameter? Wouldn't that be dangerous?

World War 1 rolls around, Britain and her allies don't have nearly enough guns and get anyone they can (United States) to start pumping out handguns as fast as possible. Colt and Smith & Wesson answer the call chambering their respective revolver models in .455 Eley - note the name change, not a .455 Webley it's a .455 Eley. The Americans are already set up for the 45 Colt and 45 ACP, so why would they turn around and re-tool to produce a .455 diameter barrel for a .455 bullet that's really only .452 in diameter?

Can it be possible that the .455 Smith and Wesson and maybe even the .455 Colt really have .45 barrels?

Has anyone else slugged their .455 Smith and Wesson barrels? Do they really have a .455 diameter barrel?
 
Thats quite interesting
All of the material I've read says that the groove diameter should be .455"

Perhaps it is worth just trying a sized and lubed .452" in your smith. I have seen lots of S&W and Cold New Service Revolvers rechambered to .45 Colt which appear to shoot just fine.

However I would be very interested to see what the groove dia. is on a MkVI webley before I was entirely convinced. I bet you will find a different situation here. Perhaps the USA just used what they had - .452" barrels for a British Contract?
 
45colt is .454-.455 and 45acp is .451-452.
S&W and Colt both made revolvers in .455 Eley, 45 colt, and .45acp during WWI. Hard to imagine they would use different barrels for each cartridge during wartime produciton......
 
OK, early revolvers were marked .455/476 and could use either cartridge.
If you want to get an awakening, mike the cylinder mouths of that Webley. They are NOT 455 diameter, and thats what enters the barrel. The hollow base Webley bullet than expands to fill the grooves like a Minie ball.
 
HATE TO ARGUE WITH YOU;
The "old" standard for .45LC was .454-.455 but since WW-11 all modern revolver producers adopted .452

.45acp has always been .451 nominal....

WW-11 production of revolvers by Colt and S&W varied a great deal in bore diameter, if they were contract pieces for the UK a typical bore will come out at #.454-.455

Whereas Webley's will, based on what I have seen have bores running between .455 & .459

The great number of bore diameters is one reason that Dominion (CIL) loaded their cartridges with a deep hollow based bullet (soft lead) which was very forgiving.

BTW, the old Webleys with the proper load can be VERY accurate.

John
 
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