march-april 1978 number 72 - rifle magazine 1978 number 72 u.s. & canada, $1.50 foreign, $1.75 i...

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MARCH-APRIL 1978 NUMBER 72 U.S. & Canada, $1.50 Foreign, $1.75 I

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MARCH-APRIL 1978 NUMBER 72

U.S. & Canada, $1.50 Foreign, $1.75

I

NEAL KNOX Editor and Publisher

DAVE WOLFE Executive Editor

RALPH TANNER, JR. Director of Sales

DAVE LeGATE Art Director

LYNDA RITTER Editorial Assistant

RICHARD L. ALDlS Staff Photographer

JOYCE BUETER Circulation Manager

TERRY B U ETER Circulation

WANDA HALL Accounting

BARBARA PlCKERlNG Production Supervisor

JANA KOSCO Executive Secretary

TECHNICAL EDITORS

BOB BRACKNEY BOB HAGEL CLAY HARVEY WALLACE LABISKY AL MILLER MAJ. GEORGE C. NONTE, JR. HOMER POWLEY KEN WATERS DON ZUTZ

Published b y W o l f e Publishing Co., Inc. Dave W o l f e . Pres ident

Handloader The Journal of Ammunition Reloading

Vol. 13 -No. 2 Box 30-30, Prescott, Arziona 86302 March-April 1978

FEATURES: Jack O’Connor Succumbs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Staff

Updating the .45 ACP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clay Harvey

Pet Loads: ,375 H&H.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ken Waters

Specialty Loads With Hercules Powder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Don Zutz

Basics of ‘Shotshells by the Bushel’ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Frank Murphy &

,256 Magnum, Ahead of Its Time? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Philip C. Briggs

Case for the ,256 Magnum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Philip C. Briggs

Complete Reloading - Case Forming.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bob Hagel

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27

Clement Feeny 28

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35

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DEPARTMENTS: Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Reader Bylines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Lock, Stock & Barrel . . . . . . . . . . 10 Loading the Old Ones.. . . . . . . . 12

Tip to Tip. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Answers Please . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Book Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,551 ProducTests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61

Propellant Profiles. . . . . . . . . . . .66

RIFLE Magazine ) Telephone (602) 445 7810 Second Class Postage paid at Prescott Arizona and additional mailing offices Subscription prices U S possessions and Canada - single issue $1 50 6 issues $7 75 12 issues $13 00 18 issues $17 00 Foreign - single issue $1 75 6 issues $9 00 12 issues $15 00 18 issues $20 00 Advertising rates furnished on request All rights reserved

Publisher o f HANDLOADER is not responsible for mishaps of any nature which might occur from use of published loading data or from recommendations by any member of The Staff No part 01 this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the editor Manuscripts from free lance writers must be accompanied by stamped self addressed envelope and the publisher cannot accept responsibility lor lost or mutilated manuscripts

Change of address Please give six weeks notice Send both old and new address plus mailing label i f possible l o Circulation Dept HANDLOADER Magazine P 0 Box 3030 Prescott Arizona 86302

YOUR MARCH-APRIL COVER

Do any readers have information on the Collier Shot Tower Company? This glass paperweight (obviously a Collier promotion item) was found in an Illinois secondhand store during World War II. Shot sizes inside vary from #12 at the top to #00 at the bottom. Photographer Rick Jamison added the Alcan brass shotshells for the “artistic touch.”

4 HANDLOADER Magazine

.35 Whelen Twist

I f you were to build u p a rifle for the single purpose of shooting heavy cast bullets using Pyrodex or black powder in .35 Whelen caliber, what would be your choice of rifling twkt? U

Powder P uzz I e

Reference the 7x300 Weatherby: Many owners use H-870 in extensive practice, but almost always load H-570 when shooting for record. Other than throat saving with H-870, d o you know of any reason for this?

Toying with plans for a new rifle - either 8mm/378 or .338/378. Regardless of bullet availability, which bore size would you choose?

Lee Truav San Antonio, Texas

Frankl+v, I know of no good reason .for using H-870,for practice shooting with the 7mm/300 Weatherby, and going to H-570 for match shooting. Sotne rifles ina.v give better accuracy with H-570, but unless a lot of load juggling is done, velocity will not be the same, and point of impact will almost certainly be dxferent at long

range. Also, while H-870 is supposed to burn cooler, H-570 is cleaner burning and does not gunk up a barrel as inuch. I’d s q v there is a big question inark here.

M y personal opinion is that the .338/378 is a inuch better cartridge than an 8mm on the same case. The fact is, either bore is on the small side for that case. You’ll ,find even the .338 bore touchy to work with in the big case, and it does a betterjob left as is. [ f you will g o back to Rifle No. 53, you’ll find illy

report on the .338/378, which will tell.voic ,far inore than I can in a letter. An?, probleins that occur with the .338 bore will he ,qreater with the 8inin bore. There is no wav vou can innore the bullet

J.R. Anderson Medical Lake, Washington

Using Pyrodex or black powder in the .35 Whelen, you probably won’t obtain more than 1,600 ,fps M V (if that much), with heavy bullets. Therefore, you’ll need a rifling twist steep enough to stabilize the long bullets, but not so steep as to exert too much rotational torque.

The .35 Winchester had a I-in-12 twist, which I believe is too ,fast ,for best results with cast bullets, and the old .38-72-275 WCF had a I-in-22 twist which might be a bit slow ,for the smaller diarneter, longer .35 caliber slugs. The .38-55 Winchester’s twi.st was I-in-18. Hence, I believe I’d opt for either a I-in-16 or I-in-18 twist in a .35

. . yituation as it exists, because voir have bullets like the Nosler 210-grain and the Sierra 250-,qrain B T, which are superior ,for long-ranpe shooting to an-v 8inin bullet inade currentlv.

Bob Hand

Perfec slow it Althouah it ooerates with the orecision of a

ammunition with the speed of a production line.

precise factory specifications, but are held in the ~ 3

box of 100 primers and requires no further handling Others include a cam-operated

wad carrier, automatic shot and powder charging, auto- matic indexing and precise A control of the crimping operation. A s k your dealer to dernon- strate the Size-0-Matic, the world’s fastest and most Drecise shotshell reloader

‘ WE DON’T RELOAD SHOTSHELLS-WE REMANUFACTURE THEM

Whelen to be used with cast bullets, and black or Pyrodex PO wder.

Ken Waters

‘Long Throat’ Problems

I own a Remington Model 700 which was rebarreled with h Douglas I-in-IO twist barrel in 7mm Remington Magnum caliber. At the time of rebarreling, I requested the gunsmith “long-throat’’ the barrel !<-inch but I later found that he long-throated nearly !h-inch. This has created a loading problem something less than ideal for loading bullets of less weight than 175 grains.

I conducted a substantial amount of experimenting during the past eighteen months attempting to obtain top grade accuracy. With I75-grain Nosler bullets (old style) and 175-grain Hornady spire point bullets, this rifle will habitually shoot 1 % to 2-inch groups at 200 yards. Both these long bullets are seated so that the overall cartridge length is exactly 3”/,, inches. Maximum loads of H-870 powder are used - 82 grains for the 175 Nosler bullet (old style) and 80.3 grains for the 175 Hornady bullet . Those loads chronographed 2,982 a n d 2,916, respectively, at I O feet. Accuracy falls off badly when I have attempted to load lighter bullets - especially 154, 150 and 140-grain bullets. I also noted that accuracy fell off when the 175-grain bullets were seated so that the overall length of the cartridge was less.

My specific inquiry revolves around attempting to find some slightly longer case than the 7mm Remington Magnum. I was interested in the possibility of necking .300 Winchester Magnum cases to 7mm, but have been unable to find a gunsmith

HANDLOAOER Magazine 16

that can perform such rechambering work. As an alternative, I have thought of the possibility of necking down .300 Winchester cases to the standard 7mm Remington Magnum body size but leave a long neck on the case so that 140 to 160- grain bullets could be seated to a longer overall cartridge length, but this would take some special neck reaming work for which I have not yet found a willing gunsmit h.

information or data been released as to the specific po wder or charges used.

Browning *30-06 and Furthermore, i f you were able to get a have been reading about the new different make of Sabot, it would almost Remington Accelerator cartridge. certainly require different load data f rom

I am a handloader and would like to that UsedbY Remingfon-

Sabot they use to load the accelerator* I satisfactory thing we handloaders can do

cartridge. Mike Jones their Sabots available, along with the Louisville, Kentucky proper load data. Any attempt to

improvise or make guesses could be

Sabots f o r reloading the Remington ‘‘Accelerator” cartridge. Nor has atzy Ken Waters

Load Accelerator? I have a

know if there is I can buy the A t (his point, the only safe as we/[ as

would like to load this super varmint is to wait until Remington seesfit (0 make

I know of no source f o r the plastic dangerous! I would be interested in your appraisal

of rechambering my present 7mm Remington Magnum to either of the above types of cases, and reference,to a gunsmith service’that would perform such rechambering. My present 175-grain loading is all iwould ask for, but most of my hunting is for game smaller than elk where I prefer a lighter and faster bullet. Also, the recoil is less with lighter bullets in addition to shooting flatter which makes i t easier to hit the target. ,

Miles T. Craddick South Bend, Ind.

There are two or three ways you could go in solving your problem. Perhaps one of the simplest and cheapest would be to have a competent gunsmith cut about % - inch off of the chamber end of the barrel and rethread and rechamber with the correct throat lenzth. Actuallv. i f YOU _ _ ” - intend to use no bullet weight heavier than the 160-grain, and mostly 140-150 grains, you will not gain much in having a longer throat than is standard in the Retnington Model 700 chatnber. If the barrel is set back it would, of course, be necessary to glass the gap in the barrel channel, but this is not difficult for a good stocktnaker.

You could also do as you mentioned and rechatnber to the ,300 Winchester case necked to 7mtn. I do not recall who may have chatnbering reamers fo r this job, but it is done quite regularly. I suspect most good gunsmiths would do it if you were willing to pay the cost of the reamer in addition to the chatnbering.fee.

Another ideal solution if you wish to use a longer cartridge would be to have the barrel rechatnbered to the 7mm Mashburn Super Magnum. Write Mashburn Arms Co., 1218 North Pennsylvania, Oklahoma City, OK 73107, and tell them what you have in mind.

The only problem you tnay encounter here is that you have no way of knowing if the barrel will shoot the lighter bullet weights well even with shorter throating. I suspect that the long throat may be causing the accuracy probletn. but it is also possible that the barrel does not digest light bullets well. I have seen tnanv Weatherby rifles that gave Rood accuracy with all bullet weights with M-inch throating.

I I A I I Ill1 118

Bob Hagel

March.April 1978 17

WILDCAT CARTRID GE S By BOB HAGEL

CONCLUSION OF SERIES

EBSTER DEFINES a wildcat W cartridge as “having a bullet of standard caliber but using an expanded case, or a case designed for a bullet of greater caliber necked down for the smaller bullet.’’

I t may have been that simple when gun buffs first started wildcatting commercial cases, but today there are as many wildcat cartridges “necked up” by expanding to a larger caliber as are necked down. The case body is often expanded for less taper and greater powder capacity, but in other instances the taper is left the same and the shoulder blown forward to gain more boiler room.

I f the parent case capacity is to be greatly increased, the body may be expanded and the shoulder pushed forward simultaneously. Neck length on a short-necked case can be increased by

and CASE FORMING

pushing the shoulder back, leaving the overall case length unchanged. With some cases that have heavy body taper - the .300 and .375 H&H cases being prime examples - the shoulder may be pushed back and the neck cut off to form a shorter case, but the body can be blown out resulting in more powder capacity than the original. I f less capacity is the wildcatter’s goal, the original shoulder is simply pushed back and the neck shortened.

In making any of these changec, the case may be necked up to accept a larger caliber bullet, necked down to hold a smaller bullet, or left in the original caliber. When a wildcatter is working with a mild shoulder angle and thinks a more acute angle will achieve the deqired performance, the angle is changed with the other dimensions unchanged. I n fact, about anything that is done to change an original case’s dimension? can be considered wildcatting. Some wildcatters have even gone further and made bullets in diameters unavailable from commercial sources - the .230 caliber being an example.

Although it is not possible for the average wildcatter to extend the overall case length, it can be accomplished by the redrawing process. I f an obsolete case is needed and another case of the same head size is available, the longer case can be formed via the redraw method - an

Many of the most popular modern commercial cartridges were once wildcat, in identical form. The Remington .22-250 and 25-06 are classic examples. Many other commercial cartridges began as wildcats, with slight changes - wildcatters doing most of the experimental work.

36

example being the use of .30-40 cases to form .35 Winchester. This could certainly be considered a sophisticated form of wildcatting.

The question is often asked why good commercial cases are wildcatted and what, if any, improvements emerge from the wildcat cartridge. Today this is a moot question, but i t was not always so. We now have many good commercial cartridges in various calibers with cases of different powder capacities, most with shoulders of around 25“ - an optimum for most loads and hard to improve upon. I suspect the biggest complaint the knowledgeable handloader has against some modern cases is the excessively short neck. All in all, modern cartridge cases have filled the caliber gaps, but i t should be remembered the wildcatter brought this all about.

For those who are not familiar with wildcats vs. commercial cartridges, a few examples may reveal the lack of ingenuity the major arms companies exhibited over the past f i f ty years or so.

Well-informed gun people knew what great cartridges the .22-250 and the .25-06 were for many, many years before the big arms companies would admit i t , although similar cartridges were designed and marketed in the meantime. The .22-250 was developed back in 1934-1937 by various wildcatters, but not loaded commercially until 1964. I t immediately became a best seller. And i f that sounds like the outcome of a ten-mile turtle race, the .25-06 wildcat was around in the 1920 circa and not commercially loaded until Remington chambered i t in the Model 700 in 1969! Many o ther commercial cartridges have been the fruit of some wildcatter’s efforts, including the 7mm.06 and .285 OKH which became the .280 Remington many years later. The 7mm

HANDLOADER Magazine

1 2 3 4

Remington Magnum had been made by necking up the ,264 Winchester case for years, and fueled by other big 7s like the 7mm Mashburn publicized by Warren Page. There were also various wildcat .333 magnums that evolved into the commercial ,338 Winchester and ,340 Weatherby.

Wildcatting grows from many reasons and spans the spectrum from hard knowledge of interior ballistics to the outgrowth of a passing whim. Our most efficient cartridges are based on the former , while the latter produces cartridges of little practical value except to the fellow who dreamed them up. Usually, however, the designer has some specific ballistic criteria in mind that no commercial cartridge provides, and has the knowledge to attain them.

Perhaps the foremost reason for wildcatting has been to attain better performance for hunting cartridges. Some situations call for increasing case capacity with .the resultant higher velocity for

5 6 7 8 9 10 11

Some popular commercial cartridges that are used as parent stock for wildcats, plus a few of those wildcats. (1) .30-06; (2) ,240 Gibbs; (3) ,285 OKH; (4) ,338-06; (5) .35 Whelen; (6) 300 H&H; (7) 7mm Mashburn Super Magnum; (8) .338 Winchester; (91.4761338; (10).375 H&H; and(11).334 OKH.

flatter trajectory and greater retained energy. Yet others demand a larger caliber with heavier bullets for use on larger game while not compromising velocity for greater shock and reasonably flat trajectory. Some cartridges a re wildcatted by blowing out a long case and then chopping it off to function in a short action, but retaining both the caliber and velocity of the original case.

low recoil. This normally requires reducing the capacity of some existing case or necking up one of the .222 head size cases to a larger caliber.

After the wildcat case has fully taken shape in the wildcatter’s mind and on the drawing board, reamers are . made for chambering the rifle and dies and a rifle is actually chambered. The next step is forming cases from existing brass which

The long-range target shooter may can be very simple, requiring no tools wildcat a cartridge in an attempt to gain other than the full-length resizing die, or high velocity with a bullet of great ballistic quite complicated - requiring possibly coefficient. Less bullet drop, less wind several form dies, a trim die, a ream die deflection, and contained recoil adds up and reamer, plus the full-length resizing to higher scores over the longer shooting die, and finally fireforming to fit the rifle sessions. chamber. It takes some knowledge to

execute the operations properly without ruining The bench rest wildcatter works with

cases he hopes will. deliver one-hole caSeS than are formed.

accuracy while attaining wind-bucking Simply necking an existing case up or velocity with reasonably heavy bullets and down by no more than a couple of calibers

(.02-inch as used here) is the easiest route for a wildcat case and needs only a full- length resizing die. I f the case is necked

1 so that color can be observed and overheating avoided.

March April 1978 37

single pass. I f i t IS necked up, the expander ball does the chore. One word of caution here: polishing the expander ball, especially on the taper just above the decapping pin, can prevent case neck buckling. And the inside or outside of the neck will need lubrication to avoid sticking.

I t is also possible to expand case necks by firing the original cartridge in the wildcat chamber i f all o the r case dimensions are the same and the wildcat's bore the larger of the two - an example being a .30-06 cartridge in an 8mm-06 wildcat chamber. It is a good idea to outside-turn case necks that have been expanded considerably, since they are normally thicker on one side than the other. This is more prone to happen when

expanding a neck - either by the expander ball or firing method - than by necking it down. Uneven wall thickness results in a bullet out of line with the bore and a general loss of accuracy.

A case necked down by four or more calibers - .35 to .30 for an example - requires thinning the neck to attain chamber clearance with a bullet seated. I f the original case body is reduced to form the new wildcat's neck, thinning is also called for. There are two general methods of thinning - turning the outside of the neck after full-length resizing with the neck expanded to the correct diameter, or inside reaming the neck via a neck reamer. The latter is normally used, but either works well and depends primarily on tools at hand. Inside reaming will require a die for that particular cartridge, but only a pilot of the correct caliber is needed for outside turning, and pilots are cheaper than ream dies and reamers.

Perhaps the next easiest forming job is necking the parent case up or down by one or two calibers, shortening the overall head-to-shoulder length, and increasing

Some wildcat cases can be formed from more than one parent case, the 7mm Mashburn Super Magnum a prime example. Using the .300 Winchester, the shoulder must be pushed back; hence, new cases should be used to avoid wrinkling. Left to right are the ,300 Winchester case, the 7mm Mashburn case perfectly formed from new brass, and the 7mm Mashburn formed from once-fired ,300 brass. Wrinkles do not ruin the case, but may form cracks after repeated firings.

the milder shoulder angle to a bit steeper slope. It is sometimes possible to form these cases in full-length resizing dies i f they are cut to correct length first. I t is much simpler, however, to have a form/ trim die made (RCBS has them in stock for most popular wildcat cartridges, and will make them for others). This die will form the new n e c k and shoulder in a single pass, and is hardened so excess brass may be cut off with a hacksaw and Filed smooth without damage to the die. Another pass through the full-length resizing die and the case is ready to load. Examples of such wildcats are various .30 calibers made on ,300 H&H brass, and a number of 7mni magnums such as the Mashburn Super Magnum. Most of these cases have sharp shoulders of 25 to 40". and the bodies are blown out to give greater powder capacitv. (Fireforming will be covered later.)

Wildcats like the 7mm Mashburn SM bring up something that is not considered by many handloaders who form and load wildcat cases: there is often more than one factory cartridge case that can be used to form the wildcat. As an example, any case that can be formed from .300 H&H brass can be formed from .375 H&H cases with additional form dies. However, the reverse is not true for the many wildcat cartridges originally made from the longer .375 H&H case. The ,300 case will be too short. Wildcats from the .300 and .375 H&H cases can also be made from Weatherby .300, .340 and .375 brass.

Cases that have been fired two or three

This case forming iob is fairly simple, yet requires a f o r m h i m die and fire-forming. At left is (1) the ,300 H&H parent case; (2) the case necked to 7mm; (3) necked case cut to correct length Four steps are necessary in case forming from a basic un- for 7mm Mashburn Super Magnum; (4) case fire-formed using 25 necked case, in this instance from ,404 Jeffery to ,333. Three grains of 2400 and flour as filler. Case at right (5) was fire- steps are necessary to form the neck, and the remaining formed with a bullet. Note that case formed with bullet operation is trimming to length in a trim die. The case is then completely matches chamber configuration. full-length resized before loading.

38 HANDLOADER Magazine

times start to become brittle and thus should be used when the only change is necking up or down by no more than a couple of calibers. But the more compli- cated forming tasks demand new unfired brass. Trying to use old cases that have been fired a number of times, or even old cases that d o become brittle with age, leads to complaints about necks and shoulders that wrinkle when forming, or split when fired. Some form jobs can’t be performed without wrinkled shoulders when the cases have been fired, and setting back shoulders that have angles of 25” or more is one of them. Even annealing the neck/shoulder area of fired cases with steep shoulder angles will not always cure the problem as annealing may make them too soft.

Lubricants can also be the root of shoulder wrinkles when applied with too much enthusiasm, but the slick stuff is nevertheless essential in case forming. I f the case body is not changed, lube only the neck or neck/shoulder area that is to be formed, and d o i t sparingly with your fingers to form an even, thin coat. Run the case into the form die and if i t requires too much pressure, drop i t out of the die and give it another thorough but meager shot. This procedure will eliminate many a wrinkled shoulder. Any case lube that works well in full-length resizing will handle the job , but avoid thinner varieties. Wax lubes are particularly at their best due to dense consistency. Even the toughest case forming jobs, however, d o not require the pressure that is needed to full-length resize a big case like the ,400 Jeffery, .416 Rigby or the .378/.460 Weatherby that has been fired in a large chamber at high pressure. For this work I have never found any lube that works as well as good pad lube like that distributed by RCBS, Hodgdon, etc.

There are wildcat cartridges that have longer bodies and shorter necks than their parent cases with the oid Gibbs wildcat line as an example. Gibbs cartridges are formed from .30-06 brass to give more powder capacity than the original case affords. Whereas the .30-06 Ackley

In forming operations that require pushing the shoulder forward, it is wise to

expand the neck to a larger caliber, and then neck it back in the wildcat die to

prevent head separations. In the case above, the .30-06 case at left has been

necked up to ,338, and a new partial shoulder formed on the neck by running it

into the full-length .30 Gibbs sizing die. The fire-formed .30 Gibbs case is at right.

Improved and other similar “cats” have fireformed bodies with less taper and sharper shoulders than the ’06 case, the Gibbs have their shoulders blown forward to give both longer case bodies and less taper. This configuration gives a very short neck and increases powder capacity. When a Gibbs case is destined to be smaller than .30 caliber, a form die with the correct headspace dimensions leaves a small new shoulder forward of the old one. and the. case is fireformed in the chamber. But the .30 and 8mm Gibbs cartridges aren’t all that easy. While cases can sometimes be formed for the .30 Gibbs by simply firing .30-06 ammunition in the Gibbs chamber, there is a high probability the cartridge will either not fire at all or a partial or complete head separation will occur. Even it a partial separation does not happen, it is almost certain a stretch ring will be formed inside the case. Thtis this procedure i r not recotntnended.

Gibbs cases can also be formed by seating the bullets \o that in closing the bolt they are jammed solidly into the lands. The bolt should be hard to close on the cartridge. Even this method at times gives problems with an inside stretch ring that forewarns a head separation. I prefer to form a second shoulder to headspace against by first necking the case up to .338 for the .30 Gibbs and .35 tor the 8mm by running the .06 case over a ,338 or .35 expander plug. I t is best to use 8mm and ,338 plugs first when going to .35. This can be done by screwing the decapping stem down out of the die and inserting the larger plug from the bottom in the Gibbs

die, or by simply running the case into other dies in those calibers to expand the neck. After expanding the neck, run the case into the Gibbs resizing die to correctly headspace for the Gibbs chamber, making sure the new shoulder gives a crush fit in the rifle chamber. This will hold the case head tight against the bolt face and eliminate the danger of a stretch ring. I f the new shoulder looks too small, the bullet may also be seated out to press into the lands for double insurance.

This method will work equally well on cases of similar design. And it does no harm to seat bullets into the lands when shoulders of rimmed and/or belted cases are to be blown forward by fireforming. Remember, however, this should not be done i f a near-maximum load is used for fireforming since seating the bullet hard into the lands will kick pressures up.

After a case has been run through the first or second die, the brass becomes work hardened and case wrinkling might be noted. Annealing the area down to slightly below the new shoulder can alleviate the problem and prolong case life. A few forming operations that require the annealing operation include forming cases f rom large caliber cartridges in big belted cases, from basic cases that are the unnecked originals of those cases, o r even necking and

Necking large cases to small calibers, or forming necks from original body portion Of original cases, requires that necks be thinned. This can be done by outside turning as with a Marquart or Forster case frimrner (left) or by inslde reaming in a die, such as the RCBS at right.

March.April 1978 39

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not develop enough pressure to form the case body to a perfect fi t in the chamber, no harm is done and a full-power load will finish forming the case. But if the new shoulder does not form to fill the chamber tightly, especially on a rimless cartridge, a stretch ring with partial or complete head separation is inevitable.

Many reloaders seem reluctant to use bullets in fireform loads, apparently feeling bullets are too expensive or they are unwilling to cubject the barrel to extra wear. Instead, they use fast burning

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powders and some substance inside the case to build up pressure. 1 have tried most of these methods and found that bodies will expand fairly well but the new shoulder often does not fill out to snugly fit the chamber shoulder. This is particularly t rue with heavy walled modern cases with hard brass.

A few bullet substitutes I have used include wax plugs, rolled paper plugs, and fine-grained cereal or flour to fil l the case; all of these ahead of a fast powder like 2400, Unique or a shotgun or pistol powder of similar quickness. The wax or paper plugs will handle fireforming on fairly thin cases that d o not require too much expansion, and do not develop high pressures.

Flour or fine-grained cereal like Cream- of-Wheat and corn meal will d o a much better job. Charge the case with powder and sift in enough flour or cereal to fill the case to about the base of the neck, then insert a plug of paper to hold i t in place. I can't tell you the exact powder charge that will work best with your particular wildcat or filler medium, but as an example, the belted magnum cases will be expanded with about 25 grains of 2400 behind a flour filler. But even with this method they will not fi t the chamber perfectly.

My own experience has indicated a perfectly formed case requires pressure over 40,000 psi, and some of the tougher jobs require nearer 50,000 psi. In some instances, a reasonably mild full-power load can be used both to form and hunt with. In many wildcat cases, however, the unformed case will not take enough powder to develop the pressure required for a full-throttle load. Where this condition exists, the case will have to be fireformed before loading for hunting or target use.

For the heavy fireforming jobs, a medium-burning powder like 4895, 4064 or 4320 will work well in cases from .30-06 and up. Start with a conservative test charge and work up until the case is perfectly formed and continue using that load.

Economically, a lighter weight bullet should be chosen when that method is mandated, such as with the Gibbs line. When the case body is to be radically changed or the shoulder shape changed or pushed forward, a few bucks spent on bullets is prudent insurance against case failures and a ruined hunting trip.

Hydraulic pressure can also be utilized in forming cases but the necessary equipment is beyond the average handloader's pocketbook. I may have overlooked a few o ther points on wildcatting and case forming that others have found successful, but hope this information may start a green wildcatter in the right direction - or discourage such a venture i f its problems are too high a price for the improved performance. 0

HANDLOADER Magazine 40