- Location
- Western Manitoba
So, I am putting together a "punkin chucker" - rifle will have a Hellqvist rear aperture sight, a nice sizeable front bead that I can actually see, and is destined for plinking and putzing away at things that are out to, say, 100 yards - I would consider 150 yards to be a very long reach for me with this outfit. Hoping that 4" groups at 100 yards might be achievable?
The cartridge is 9.3x57. The bullets are gas checked 285 grain Round Nose Flat Meplat - see picture below. I know I want the lube groove fully covered with the neck. I know I want the gas check at or above the junction of the neck and the shoulder. So that seems to still leave a lot of choice as far as actual seating depth. I have loaded 1,000's of jacketed rounds since 1976-ish, and some cast rounds, but none have that shoulder as shown. The nose section is very much smaller diameter than the rifling to rifling diameter - say .003" or so smaller.
I have not put the barrel into the action yet, nor have I received the dies to convert the 8x57 brass. For "optimum" results, where do I want that shoulder on the bullet to be, relative to the "lands" - do I want "jump" or do I want the cast bullet shoulder hard into (engraving) the lands? No clue yet if the later is even possible, until I get the rifle assembled - given the magazine length of a M96 Swede. Or, does it matter? I would appreciate hearing anyone's experience doing it one way or the other.

The cartridge is 9.3x57. The bullets are gas checked 285 grain Round Nose Flat Meplat - see picture below. I know I want the lube groove fully covered with the neck. I know I want the gas check at or above the junction of the neck and the shoulder. So that seems to still leave a lot of choice as far as actual seating depth. I have loaded 1,000's of jacketed rounds since 1976-ish, and some cast rounds, but none have that shoulder as shown. The nose section is very much smaller diameter than the rifling to rifling diameter - say .003" or so smaller.
I have not put the barrel into the action yet, nor have I received the dies to convert the 8x57 brass. For "optimum" results, where do I want that shoulder on the bullet to be, relative to the "lands" - do I want "jump" or do I want the cast bullet shoulder hard into (engraving) the lands? No clue yet if the later is even possible, until I get the rifle assembled - given the magazine length of a M96 Swede. Or, does it matter? I would appreciate hearing anyone's experience doing it one way or the other.





















































