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A Merlin race block is based on a cast iron BBC, that doesn't imply that you'll ever compete successfully using a 1972 454 block from grampa's old station wagon....
To actually answer your question, perty much every successful wildcat is based on something already available. The 22-250 falls short in a variety of areas, the biggest being that the angles used preclude good resizing. The low shoulder will always slip and makes precise chamber fit problematic......The excess body taper also makes extraction difficult and the large primer makes it impossible to get the pressure up for a clean burn......ALL problems identified and SOLVED in the CM round.
A Merlin race block is based on a cast iron BBC, that doesn't imply that you'll ever compete successfully using a 1972 454 block from grampa's old station wagon....
To actually answer your question, perty much every successful wildcat is based on something already available. The 22-250 falls short in a variety of areas, the biggest being that the angles used preclude good resizing. The low shoulder will always slip and makes precise chamber fit problematic......The excess body taper also makes extraction difficult and the large primer makes it impossible to get the pressure up for a clean burn......ALL problems identified and SOLVED in the CM round.
Nice post Evan. You sound reasonable so I'll try to explain my position.Sorry, Al. I think that's B.S. and I half think you're just trolling here. You've made sensible comments in other thread sin the past; this is the first that has struck me as ridiculous. First off, josebd is the guy who is just trying to figure out why his trap speed isn't what it should be when he dynoed 500whp the day before. He's not trying to make his 500whp Camaro trap 200mph. Now to the "problems":
Ultimately I'm befuddled and angry that folks are telling josebd that he can't expect more than what he's getting from a 22-250. Better 0.5MOA is not a high hurdle. It's not like he's trying to go from 0.2MOA into the teens. Maybe this really is the limit of his equipment, but it's NOT an inherent limit of the 22-250.
- I don't even know what you mean by the angles precluding good sizing. Can you explain what you mean? There is no unusual trouble bumping shoulders 0.002 or sizing the necks with even off-the-shelf dies. Works perfectly, just like with any other bottleneck brass cartridge of the last century that isn't overly work hardened.
- The 22-250 has a 28 degree shoulder, which is much steeper than the 23 of the 222, or the 20 of the 308. Both of which are known for exceptional accuracy and no "slipping" issues at all. It's also only 2 degrees less than the modern "standard" of 30. It's clearly not going to cause head spacing issues or we'd have heard about it before now.
- Excess body taper causing extraction issues? What kind of extraction issues are you talking about? Maybe if your chamber is polished mirror smooth or your case is oiled and you're getting bolt thrust. Otherwise,it works perfectly fine, just like with any other bottleneck brass cartridge of the last century. There is a large amount of surface area for the brass to grab and the body taper is just about 1 degree which would actually make it easier to extract the brass after firing vs a straight wall (less friction).
- The large primer causing an unclean burn just sounds silly to me in this context. I'm running single digit SD and low teen ES with my 22-250 with large primers. This isn't a PPC and he's not trying to achieve those levels. The only ignition issues I've heard of have been with spherical powders that are known to be difficult, but a small primer doesn't fix that, it's just the physical/chemical reality of that powder type. I just don't see this as a problem, especially not at ~0.5MOA.
Round count 50,new shilen,cleans up very easy,no copper fouling