Alex Wheeler
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Yes, thats about right. The most important part of cartridge design is optimizing the case size. Through testing you find what speed a bullet performs at. At some point if you push them too fast the agg suffers. So if we know a 180 hybrid shoots well around 2800-2950 you want a case that maxes out there. Thats why the BRA and PPC work so well too, they are maxed out. If it was up to me the 7-6.5prcw would be a hair smaller yet but the brass forming op would hurt more than it would help. The shorter powder columns help with consistency. The longer they get the more es and consistency suffers. Thats why the prc case is proving to edge out the 284 for raw accuracy. Probably the perfect cartridge would be a max charge to get you the velocity you want in a round case. But we are stuck with the brass we have. I dont think taper or shoulder angle have a role in accuracy but they do in other things like pressure handling and brass stability. Neck length doesnt play a role either but it does effect throat wear so you could say less wear measure less chasing and staying in tune. We saw a huge difference in the dasher vs bra with throat movement.Agreed. In F Class, 7PRCW (6.5prc/7mm) also won the South African Nationals, Texas State Championship as well as the Southwest Nationals this year. It also took at least 2 of the top 5 spots at the European Championship this year.
To paraphrase (sorry Alex I can't find your exact quote) @Alex Wheeler, the 7prcw wasn't made to be a magnum cartridge, it was made to be a more stable and longer lifed 284 shehane to which it's done admirably. Brass life is insanely long, barrel life has been great for most using it and tuning is largely easy with a number of powders. It has huge flexibility. I've seen it hammer in the 2700's, 2800's, 2900's and surprisingly I've even seen a few hitting the 3,000's with accuracy although brass life will probably suffer.