Some years ago, we were entertained on TV by a programme called University Challenge, a quiz game between rival teams. The quizmaster would always lead in by saying, "And now a question for six points..." This then became a catch-phrase here for any question out of the blue. So can someone earn 6 easy points by telling me how they go about reaming 9,3x72R cases that have been cut down to form 8x57R 360 cases? (or similar conversions where the cut down case is over-thick where it becomes the new neck).
I have velocity on this Drilling up to 1833 fps (SD=7!), which may sound slow but actually, that's spot-on according to "The 8x57R/360 - Obsolete Old Favourite" by John J. Stransky in Handloader #139. Despite this, an unfired .318" dia. bullet will not fit inside any of the fired case necks. Having said that, there are no signs of pressure. All cases fall out of the rifle when it is held upwards.
Should I outside neck case neck turn? I am set up to do this on a variety of calibres with an RCBS hand-tool and I'd just need a close fitting custom pilot - easy enough to make with a lathe. I figure it should be OK if I don't seat the bullet lower than the case neck was turned. Meaning, there would be a small thickness or lip left over around the position of the case shoulder/neck.
If instead I would be better advised to case neck inside ream, (no lip), should I go for one of those expensive reamer/die set options such as RCBS/C-H etc., make where I ream the case vertically using my reloading press as the mount? Or perhaps use a trimmer adapted to horizontally case neck ream?
I assume some of you guys must do this sort of thing regularly. What do you recommend?
The next question for six is;
When you adjust the opposing windage screws in a claw-mount post, are they generally of the same thread? If so, is it the case that one full turn of thread generally equals a certain amount of shift in POI at 100 meters? This Drilling is shooting a 5-shot group under 2". It would do a lot better if I slowed down as usually 2 bullet holes will touch in a group. I just need now to get it to regulate to the target bull. My thinking is that, perhaps all these older rifles with similar claw-mounts and opposing windage screws on a square post would regulate to some sort of rule-of-thumb that a quarter turn = x amount of change at 100m. However, the fly in the ointment might be that different scopes are different lengths, so that the amount of change of POI will vary. So in that case, is there some mathematical formula that perhaps divides the distance between the scope mounts into the distance to the target and then multiplies this by the thread pitch?
Or do I just continue to do what I always have; give it a quarter turn or two and shoot it, note the effect and forget about thread pitch, mount separation distance and etc.?
Thanks in anticipation.
I have velocity on this Drilling up to 1833 fps (SD=7!), which may sound slow but actually, that's spot-on according to "The 8x57R/360 - Obsolete Old Favourite" by John J. Stransky in Handloader #139. Despite this, an unfired .318" dia. bullet will not fit inside any of the fired case necks. Having said that, there are no signs of pressure. All cases fall out of the rifle when it is held upwards.
Should I outside neck case neck turn? I am set up to do this on a variety of calibres with an RCBS hand-tool and I'd just need a close fitting custom pilot - easy enough to make with a lathe. I figure it should be OK if I don't seat the bullet lower than the case neck was turned. Meaning, there would be a small thickness or lip left over around the position of the case shoulder/neck.
If instead I would be better advised to case neck inside ream, (no lip), should I go for one of those expensive reamer/die set options such as RCBS/C-H etc., make where I ream the case vertically using my reloading press as the mount? Or perhaps use a trimmer adapted to horizontally case neck ream?
I assume some of you guys must do this sort of thing regularly. What do you recommend?
The next question for six is;
When you adjust the opposing windage screws in a claw-mount post, are they generally of the same thread? If so, is it the case that one full turn of thread generally equals a certain amount of shift in POI at 100 meters? This Drilling is shooting a 5-shot group under 2". It would do a lot better if I slowed down as usually 2 bullet holes will touch in a group. I just need now to get it to regulate to the target bull. My thinking is that, perhaps all these older rifles with similar claw-mounts and opposing windage screws on a square post would regulate to some sort of rule-of-thumb that a quarter turn = x amount of change at 100m. However, the fly in the ointment might be that different scopes are different lengths, so that the amount of change of POI will vary. So in that case, is there some mathematical formula that perhaps divides the distance between the scope mounts into the distance to the target and then multiplies this by the thread pitch?
Or do I just continue to do what I always have; give it a quarter turn or two and shoot it, note the effect and forget about thread pitch, mount separation distance and etc.?
Thanks in anticipation.
Comment