• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

6br high pressure

Frank: I've had them form after as few as 5 loadings in my Lapua 220 Russian and Lapua 6BR brass. Others may be fortunate and not have them form 'til a higher reloading count.

One of the reasons I keep an accurate count on the number of times brass has been loaded. After 4 or 5 loadings I do the simple test of attempting to drop a bullet into the case before sizing. Unless it's critical to bullet seating depth I then make certain the seated bullets are in front of their location. If it is critical, then they are removed.
 
Frank Blum said:
Why are you worrying about donuts that you don't have. If you use two hundred cases you might never get donuts before you wear the barrel out. I have 185 Lapua cases I cycle through my 6BRX. I am up to eleven reloads with no donuts. I use a FL Redding bushing die. The bushing does not quite make it to the neck/shoulder junction. Good luck with what ever you decide to do. Later! Frank
I talked to the smith who built it today and he said the exact same thing about not worrying about the donuts. I explained to him about the high pressure signs and he said it may have a tight bore and said to start at 28 grains of varget and work up. At 28.4 grains of varget, 15 thou off the lands with the sierra matchkings, at 100 yards I shot four 4 shot groups that measured 0.327,0.346 0.389 0.378, that's before subtracting the bullet diameter!! ;D 29.5 grains was to high for my gun!!. I don't have a chronograph so no clue as to velocity but to me that's very good accuracy. Tomorrow ill take it out to 300 yards and try. I never knew about measuring case web diameter until he told me, and my fired cases were 3 thousandths bigger than a new case :o
 
fdshuster said:
Frank: I've had them form after as few as 5 loadings in my Lapua 220 Russian and Lapua 6BR brass. Others may be fortunate and not have them form 'til a higher reloading count.

One of the reasons I keep an accurate count on the number of times brass has been loaded. After 4 or 5 loadings I do the simple test of attempting to drop a bullet into the case before sizing. Unless it's critical to bullet seating depth I then make certain the seated bullets are in front of their location. If it is critical, then they are removed.
I just did the same test using a 107 before I posted. Later! Frank
 
jaybray said:
Yes I meant .02 grain increments, sorry typo ;) I better try trimming to 1.550,might be the problem. I have tried the 107 matchkings, and at 29 grain start load very good accuracy right of the bat ,problem is the throat is so short that touching the lands the shank is below the neck shoulder junction. From what Ive read the donut thing will cause problems. I have some 75 grain v max ill try. since I don't have any ejector marks, flat primers, or heavey bolt lift , when I increase powder charge, do I keep going up till I blow another primer? The matchkings being a heavier bullet should show pressure sooner ? How do I tell?

Are you SURE you ment .02 incruments...and not 0.2 ? Most scales can't even measure to the hundreth of a grain.

Sorry...just had to!! ;D
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,604
Messages
2,221,851
Members
79,751
Latest member
jdoll1742
Back
Top