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Add my name to that listIts kinda funny, Most folks think that the 5.56 NATO chamber has a longer freebore than the Wylde Chamber, but it does not.
The throat geometry will have a maximum limit that can still allow feeding from a standard or unmodified magazine. In other words, throat length has an upper limit as determined by magazine length, regardless of the barrel twist rate or bullet length. I was not aware that throat length in commercial rifles was rigorously connected to barrel twist rate. I'm not saying it isn't, just that I never really thought about that before. If that is true, then I suspect the reasoning is two-fold. First, a longer bullet often requires a faster twist rate for full gyroscopic stability. Second, the longer bullet typically will benefit from a longer freebore so that it occupies less internal case volume. Thus, loads that generate reasonable velocity can readily be achieved at slightly lower operating pressure than if the bullet shank must seated way down deep in the case.OK so is a 5.56 factory barrel with a 9 twist throated different for 62g? Vs 8 for 77g? Vs a 7 twist for 90g? If so why would the throat length vary because of the magazine length restriction?
Its kinda funny, Most folks think that the 5.56 NATO chamber has a longer freebore than the Wylde Chamber, but it does not.
As an example of that, some company could manufacture .223 Rem bolt rifles with nothing but a Wylde chamber and 7-twist barrels with the expectation that they would thus be optimized for 77 gr Matchkings. Although technically correct, such a setup may not work as well for the buyer that wanted to occasionally shoot 55 or 69 gr bullets because the barrel twist rate was faster than necessary and the shorter bullets might be jumping a considerable distance before encountering the rifling. Nonetheless, that approach might still work acceptably, whereas shooting 77 SMKs from a 9-twist (or slower) barrel with a very short freebore that had been set up for much shorter [lighter] bullets may not work with the 77s at all.
Remember that different bullets have an angle where they taper to the tip, some being more or less acute than others.The other thing I was wondering about, related to this topic, is why are there various leade angles from 1.2 degree up to 3.1 degree?