Oh yesexcessive bump back situations)!!
Oh yesexcessive bump back situations)!!
I'm sorry, M-61, I deleted that post!!! I was thinking of some of the older military rifles and their extractor claws!!! Some were over travel, some are spring out and others were slope fit!!! Yes, the two worse cases of chamber problems are a NO GO GAUGE Chamber and Excessive Bump Back situation!!!!!Oh yes
Well, to a point. It is not holding it as securely or firmly or as ‘strongly’ as the shell holder.But the rifle bolt is holding the case rim in the same spot as well as the shell holder is on your seating die.
But believe me, I am very often wrong.![]()
No problem you deleted it.Excessive Bump Back situation!!!!!
No!!! The ejector pushes the case forward allowing the case shoulder to rattle in or self center into the chamber shoulder!! The extractor does not pull the case back to the same conditions of the press/form die geometry!!!! This is the true beauty of the rimless bottleneck design itself in small arms firearms!!!But the rifle bolt is holding the case rim in the same spot as well as the shell holder is on your seating die.
But believe me, I am very often wrong.![]()
Just curious on what you think occurs in a drop port action which has no ejector and only has an extractor. I have this type action and bump .0035". I do however jam (which would in turn seat the round against the bolt face) but in a jumping bullet situation it seems that the round would essentially be free floating in the chamber (a very small amount but still). Just curious your thoughts on this.No!!! The ejector pushes the case forward allowing the case shoulder to rattle in or self center into the chamber shoulder!! The extractor does not pull the case back to the same conditions of the press/form die geometry!!!! This is the true beauty of the rimless bottleneck design itself in small arms firearms!!!
I need the opinion of a SMITH!!! Do the extractors over travel????
If so, the extractor would only limit or restrict the full case shoulder contact in NO GO GAUGE CHAMBERS or excessive bump back situations!!!!
Well, to a point. It is not holding it as securely or firmly or as ‘strongly’ as the shell holder.
Years ago a SHBF (shell holder bolt face) was in favor with some (me included) who had a shell holder welded to the bolt face.
To load you withdrew the bolt (no releases or buttons) bolt just pulls straight out. Insert your cartridge into the shell holder then slide the bolt with the cartridge held by the
Shell holder. It certainly was/is an interesting idea. I have the rifle to this day. 222. Had it built for me at the start of my benchrest shooting. 1975. How’d it shoot? Fantastic. However it was built by a highly skilled gunsmith named Ed Ferguson. Douglas barrel. Sleeved action ( also an older school line of thought. Does it shoot well today? Yup. Does this have to do with the SHBF? No clue.
For bench and long range range completion, its a great design!!! ONLY ON EXTRACTING A LIVE ROUND, THERE COULD BE A PROBLEM WITH BULLET, CASE SEPARATION, SPILLING POWDER INTO THE ACTION!!! Only on firing pin strike, will the case moves forward slightly (dependent of bullet/neck fit class)!!! But, the case would still be centered from the double live center aspect (jammed bullet centered in the rifling on one end, the firing pin protrusion on the primer on the other end)!!! Thus, great case to chamber geometry!!Just curious on what you think occurs in a drop port action which has no ejector and only has an extractor. I have this type action and bump .0035". I do however jam (which would in turn seat the round against the bolt face) but in a jumping bullet situation it seems that the round would essentially be free floating in the chamber (a very small amount but still). Just curious your thoughts on this.
Generally in the instructions they tell you to remove the extractor and ejectorIf so, the extractor would only limit or restrict the full case shoulder contact in NO GO GAUGE CHAMBERS or excessive bump back situations!!!!
I'm old engineer!!! If it's not broke, don't fix it!!! Also, if you can avoid tearing things apart by utilizing another concept, try it!!!Generally in the instructions they tell you to remove the extractor and ejector
Me too. I’m strictly a bench shooter and haven’t shot competition in years. Always against myself unless someone happens by. I consider bumping strictly an operation to correct a case. Absolutely not a step in reloading. When I am done reloading my cartridges I cycle each one through the action. Granted the cartridges I shoot are extremely easy on the brass and the less I ‘work’ them the better. This is not a cost saving adventure for me to reload a case as many times as possible but I’m a nut for consistency. Small groups are my only concern.That's why I love Zero bump!!!
That is my philosophy too!!! Take advantage of the best case/chamber geometry and line that bullet up with the bore!!! Find the tuned loads that are the most accurate for that rifle!!! Then, the shooter can improve his/hers shooting skills!!! Thus, the shooter can not blame the rifle, or the reloads, for bad bullet placement!!!Me too. I’m strictly a bench shooter and haven’t shot competavly in years. Always against myself unless someone happens by. I consider bumping strictly an operation to correct a case. Absolutely not a step in reloading. When I am done reloading my cartridges I cycle each one through the action. Granted the cartridges I shoot are extremely easy on the brass and the less I ‘work’ them the better. This is not a cost saving adventure for me to reload a case as many times as possible but I’m a nut for consistency. Small groups are my only concern.
As always, anything I write is my experience with my rifles. I guess I must add, this is about my bolt action rimless cartridges.
Just offering my experience on thisI was wondering why one might want to push the shoulder back any further than light contact, though perhaps using it as a trick to get out of the doughnut with a certain bullet is conceivable. The tradeoff being, of course, more case stretch. I may be the odd man out on this one, but I don't necessarily buy into the bullet remaining unaffected in relation to the bore when the shoulder is moved back, while the bullet is seated the same. The slop introduced between shoulder and chamber provides additional forward and rearward slop of the entire cartridge, bullet included, unless the bullet is jammed. That translates to minute differences in muzzle exit timing? In the end, the target says what is working best - but....
IMO an absolutely horrible way to attempt to solve a doughnut situation.though perhaps using it as a trick to get out of the doughnut with a certain bullet is conceivable.
Yes. Drove me nuts because I couldn’t understand how this would occasionally happen.There were times where occasionally one piece of brass would be harder to close the bolt on than others
Haha, same here, cycling the press too quicklyYes. Drove me nuts because I couldn’t understand how this would occasionally happen.
I’d take that stubborn case and resize it and when I got it in the die I’d let it sit there for maybe 5-10 seconds. And then it fit in the chamber and the bolt closed the way I liked. This was not a one time occurrence. When I have this situation every time I let the case dwell in the die for a bit.. no problem.
I realized there was no reason on earth to operate the ram at the speed I was doing. I’m never in a rush and from that day forward I let every case sit for a bit in the die. My guess is? Springback. Each case is different in some manner from the next. Maybe some brass reacts just a small amount differently than the next. Consequently in my reloading all brass sits in the die a short time instead of my arm pumping like a connecting rod.
Of course as all I write, it’s my experience, in my rifle, with my brass.
All the more reason to set a die to size enough to chamber every case freely. I don’t concern myself too much with dwell time although I can’t see a down side, as a side note .003 set back won’t hurt a thing.Each case is different in some manner from the next. Maybe some brass reacts just a small amount differently than the next.
As long as you see a reason to work the brass. .003 + headspace, back and forth.All the more reason to set a die to size enough to chamber every case freely. I don’t concern myself too much with dwell time although I can’t see a down side, as a side note .003 set back won’t hurt a thing.