So for paper punching will using the Lapua Palma Brass and Small Rifle primers be a worthy advantage over the regular Lapua .308 Winchester Brass? I had a .308 long range custom rifle built that I have not shot yet. I have a box of Lapua .308 Winchester loaded rounds to start off getting fired cases to send to Whidden for custom dies and another 100 count box of unopened .308 Winchester. Should I sell all that and get Palma Rounds and Brass? I have a 1:12 twist barrel with free bore for the 155 to 168 grain projectiles as I understand.
Bob
Bob, no don't sell your 308 ammo. Use it in your rifle and you can 'upgrade' later as and when you want to or your on-range performance demands the last little bit of competitive advantage. (Or keep the large primer standard brass for short to mid range matches and adopt Palma case handloads for long-ranges where the reduced MV ES/SD values give a potential real benefit.)
Lapua Palma brass is identical to the original stuff, ignition arrangements aside. Any dies you get for the latter work equally well on the former, the only possible departure being that the sizer die MUST have a small diameter decap pin installed, the standard diameter usually being fractionally too large for the 1.5mm (0.059") flash-hole.
So far as chambers and reamers go, it is the favoured / standard FB / TR / Palma 155gn bullets and ideal freebore for it that determines most of the variations around. For years it was the older 155gn Sierra Palma MatchKing (2155) that determined the most popular chambers such as the PT&G Palma 95 and the UK 'Bisley 150' (named after the relevant section of the GB NRA's Rule 150 to end the practice of making the neck section very 'tight' leading to problems with some makes of issued 7.62mm milspec ammunition). More recent designs have different FB values to suit the current Palma SMK '#2156 with its much longer neck section and different ogive position. Usually minimum SAAMI dimensions or something close applies to the case part of the chamber specification irrespective of chamber variant. If you want to research that and lots of other things relating to rifles for this group of disciplines go to the US Rifle Teams Long-Range forum.
http://www.usrifleteams.com/lrforum/
which is the specialist discussion and information site for Fullbore and Palma competitors.
In FTR, the restricted 223/308 using variant of F-Class, which sees 100% use of handloads and where most top competitors now use heavy Berger Hybrid designs (the US FTR team has adopted the Berger '200-20X Hybrid' model for the 4-yearly F-Class World Championship series to be in Canada next year) and
very high-pressure loadings, the Palma case is both virtually essential and the norm in higher levels of the discipline thanks to its considerably greater strength. That also points up a potential advantage to the lower pressure user too - whilst standard Lapua brass likely sees around 10 loadings of a standard Palma load (155gn bullet at 2,950-3,000 fps from a 30-32" barrel), rather fewer if loads rise to 3,050 fps, with regular neck and shoulder annealing the Palma case goes on 'forever' 25+ loadings not unusual as the case-head and hence primer pocket don't expand until really horrendous pressures are encountered.