very interesting stuff Guys....
love that picture BillPa
love that picture BillPa
Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman, I don't like to force my bolt on close on my guns as they are all custom actions and the fear of galling a $700 bolt is always present. However, I have had two AI's (22-250 & 280) and they worked great with less crush than you speak of. I know .025" is your preference, but I'm sure it is not the only way to skin this cat.
Now, on to go/no go gauges, you keep saying they are irrelevant and I totally disagree on this one. You have to have a consistent benchmark for setting up your chambers, and the gauges are that benchmark. You can not use brass as your benchmark because as you said, brass varies, so you want to be able to set up all chambers identically. You can setup your chambers at go gauge minus .025" as you previously specified, or go gauge minus 0.xxx" and get consistent results from one chamber to the next.
You're not understanding this. I didn't and have never said an AI should be set up with .025" crush or that it's my preference. I've told how mine was set up like that, in this cartridge, to illustrate that the crush thing is misunderstood and can be whatever you choose. And that the cliche'd .004 isn't near enough. At present I have 3 - 22/250AI's chambered identically. They're 700's, not custom actions. In about 25yrs shooting this cartridge all chambered this way, there's never been any galling. Not ever. But if you're fearful then do it however you wish.
Disagree if you want, doesn't matter. You're having difficulty understanding this. But just think a minute.......I've never fired even one round of loaded gauge. The gun shoots brass, not a gauge. Brass is inconsistent and varies sometimes quite a bit. The best way is to first get brass, then spec the reamer to it. Then have the gunsmith do as ackleymanII said to decide how much shorter on the chamber. That very first AI, cut with .025" crush, will chamber any headstamp and result in a perfectly formed case. My opinion is the best amount of crush is about .015". But I'm tired of dealing with this so believe what you wish.
If I go off the brass every time I cut a new chamber, they will all be different because brass is never the same.
You say you have three rifles chambered identically. If a gauge was not used as a benchmark, I find that very difficult to believe.
Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman, I don't like to force my bolt on close on my guns as they are all custom actions and the fear of galling a $700 bolt is always present. However, I have had two AI's (22-250 & 280) and they worked great with less crush than you speak of. I know .025" is your preference, but I'm sure it is not the only way to skin this cat.
Now, on to go/no go gauges, you keep saying they are irrelevant and I totally disagree on this one. You have to have a consistent benchmark for setting up your chambers, and the gauges are that benchmark. You can not use brass as your benchmark because as you said, brass varies, so you want to be able to set up all chambers identically. You can setup your chambers at go gauge minus .025" as you previously specified, or go gauge minus 0.xxx" and get consistent results from one chamber to the next.
You're not understanding this. I didn't and have never said an AI should be set up with .025" crush or that it's my preference. I've told how mine was set up like that, in this cartridge, to illustrate that the crush thing is misunderstood and can be whatever you choose. And that the cliche'd .004 isn't near enough. At present I have 3 - 22/250AI's chambered identically. They're 700's, not custom actions. In about 25yrs shooting this cartridge all chambered this way, there's never been any galling. Not ever. But if you're fearful then do it however you wish.
Disagree if you want, doesn't matter. You're having difficulty understanding this. But just think a minute.......I've never fired even one round of loaded gauge. The gun shoots brass, not a gauge. Brass is inconsistent and varies sometimes quite a bit. The best way is to first get brass, then spec the reamer to it. Then have the gunsmith do as ackleymanII said to decide how much shorter on the chamber. That very first AI, cut with .025" crush, will chamber any headstamp and result in a perfectly formed case. My opinion is the best amount of crush is about .015". But I'm tired of dealing with this so believe what you wish.
If I go off the brass every time I cut a new chamber, they will all be different because brass is never the same.
You say you have three rifles chambered identically. If a gauge was not used as a benchmark, I find that very difficult to believe.
Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
My point here is that you do not know what perfect is. Can you tell me your actual headspace? I'm guessing the answer is no. So if you do not know your actual headspace, how do you know they are perfect?
Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
My point here is that you do not know what perfect is. Can you tell me your actual headspace? I'm guessing the answer is no. So if you do not know your actual headspace, how do you know they are perfect?
Brass is interchangeable between every barrel.
Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
My point here is that you do not know what perfect is. Can you tell me your actual headspace? I'm guessing the answer is no. So if you do not know your actual headspace, how do you know they are perfect?
Brass is interchangeable between every barrel.
That does not mean they are "perfect".
Anyway, this is way off topic already. My point is that if you do not measure, you will never know. To measure, you must have a benchmark, and that benchmark is the headspace gauge. Same reason machine shops have gauge blocks.
Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
My point here is that you do not know what perfect is. Can you tell me your actual headspace? I'm guessing the answer is no. So if you do not know your actual headspace, how do you know they are perfect?
Brass is interchangeable between every barrel.
That does not mean they are "perfect".
Anyway, this is way off topic already. My point is that if you do not measure, you will never know. To measure, you must have a benchmark, and that benchmark is the headspace gauge. Same reason machine shops have gauge blocks.
What it means is...... my brass fits the same in all my chambers.
Believe whatever you want. I don't give a crap anymore.
remdog said:I think my original question was if I had the right gauges not an invite to a pissing match. Thank's for all the help.
Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Erik Cortina said:Ackman said:Believe whatever you like. Since that first 22-250AI I've had 5 or 6 other barrels chambered. Each time I've taken the riflebuilder my reamer and 3 formed cases for headspace. They come out perfect. Done the same with every other AI rebarrel.
My point here is that you do not know what perfect is. Can you tell me your actual headspace? I'm guessing the answer is no. So if you do not know your actual headspace, how do you know they are perfect?
Brass is interchangeable between every barrel.
That does not mean they are "perfect".
Anyway, this is way off topic already. My point is that if you do not measure, you will never know. To measure, you must have a benchmark, and that benchmark is the headspace gauge. Same reason machine shops have gauge blocks.
What it means is...... my brass fits the same in all my chambers.
Believe whatever you want. I don't give a crap anymore.
I don't think you ever have, that's why you get your chambers headspaced with brass! ;D
Can you headspace a chamber with brass, sure you can. You can also drive your car with your feet, but that does not make it a good idea!![]()
Ackman said:gunsandgunsmithing said:More crush won't hurt if you keep the lugs well lubed AND your sizer die will be able to push the shoulder back from there. Problem there is, you won't know till you try it.
I don't agree with Ackman for the aforementioned reasons and because you only need enough crush to keep the case from moving forward while fireforming. I feel like .004-.005 is enough if the brass is consistent.
You stand less chance of galling the lugs from having all that crush.
Bolt lugs should always be lubed anyway, with any cartridge. Only takes a little. I use moly or high pressure lube. Shooting AI's since about '90, literally thousands of cases and I've never had to bump the shoulder.
Cases aren't consistent. I've not measured 22-250 brass, but have measured .243 cases. A handful each of Lapua, Win, and PMC. Measured to where new brass headspaces in an AI chamber......at the neck/shoulder junction. Just in that comparatively limited bunch, each headstamp varied by .004-006". Yes even Lapua. And shortest of one headstamp to longest of another, the difference was .009". So just chambering .004" short of SAAMI won't do it. Again, the only place the chamber hits is that neck/shoulder radius. With .015" crush you feel very little resistance. In 7,000+ formed cases I've never, not ever, had any galling whatsoever on bolt lugs.
Thing about this, the amount of crush can be whatever a person wants. It's between the gun owner and his rifle, and it's for that first firing. That's it. I'd advise Remdog to absolutely find a riflebuilder who's well versed with AI cartridges. Too many really aren't. If the guy says .004" crush is right, find someone else.
Erik Cortina said:That does not mean they are "perfect".
Anyway, this is way off topic already. My point is that if you do not measure, you will never know. To measure, you must have a benchmark, and that benchmark is the headspace gauge. Same reason machine shops have gauge blocks.