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My stuff:
Pretty bread and butter, ham and egg stuff.
Good shootin'-Al
The no-turn neck 30BR is certainly something that can be done. Expanding the brass that much does pose problems for some due to necks splitting. Lubing inside the necks really even and being easy with the press handle will pay dividends here. Probably need different twist rate to max out the accuracy with the heavier bullets but some say 1 -15 will work. I have only shot 125 gr. and lighter so I cannot say on that.Is it important to have a tight neck chamber and turn necks for the 30 br. Does expanding the brass do something different then necking down.?
Everything i have experience in has been working brass the opposite direction. Squashing the necks down in caliber.
I was thinking no neck turn for the 150 gr.
Frankie,I shoot competition UBR score, I'm going to try a 30BRs, .080 longer than the standard 30BR. Running 37.1 grains of H4198 at 3250 FPS, I like it, shooting Randy Robinett 112s, shot some last year (no competitions) and shot really well but I think that is inherent with the 30BR. I do anneal after every firing
Running in unlimited with the BAT DS and the Tom Meridith stock.Frankie,
That is what I am running in the BAT.
Tim
If you're doing that approach, there's some areas that need some rethinking. The throat length on competition level 30BR reamers will be so short that the base of a 150 will be waaaay below the neck/shoulder junction. With a small case like the BR and a bullet like the 150's, you can't afford to give up any powder space. As to neck diameter, once you expand the necks of a 6BR case to .30, there's a lump at the bottom that will measure about .337. So, the chamber neck diameter needs to be at least that for a successful no-turn chamber that won't end up giving you funnel shaped inner case necks. See the pic below re: the lump.Is it important to have a tight neck chamber and turn necks for the 30 br. Does expanding the brass do something different then necking down.?
Everything i have experience in has been working brass the opposite direction. Squashing the necks down in caliber.
I was thinking no neck turn for the 150 gr.
Do you find this chambering to stay in tune well?I shoot competition UBR score, I'm going to try a 30BRs, .080 longer than the standard 30BR. Running 37.1 grains of H4198 at 3250 FPS, I like it, shooting Randy Robinett 112s, shot some last year (no competitions) and shot really well but I think that is inherent with the 30BR. I do anneal after every firing
If you're doing that approach, there's some areas that need some rethinking. The throat length on competition level 30BR reamers will be so short that the base of a 150 will be waaaay below the neck/shoulder junction. With a small case like the BR and a bullet like the 150's, you can't afford to give up any powder space. As to neck diameter, once you expand the necks of a 6BR case to .30, there's a lump at the bottom that will measure about .337. So, the chamber neck diameter needs to be at least that for a successful no-turn chamber that won't end up giving you funnel shaped inner case necks. See the pic below re: the lump.
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Truly, for what you've semi-outlined you're wanting, my recommendation for an excellent 30BR... is the 308W.
Good shootin'-Al
