6.5 forever
Silver $$ Contributor
Is there any correlation of a longer neck vs shorter neck on run out?
What Stan was going for was to make a legal case for HBR based on the BR case. At that time, case capacity had to be at least that of the 30-30. From what I heard, it shot quite well.Stan Ware’s Radical No-Neck Wolfpup Wildcat
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https://bulletin.accurateshooter.co...y-stan-wares-radical-no-neck-wolfpup-wildcat/
I don’t shoot in his venue and that short of neck would be nothing but a liability in my preferred venue.It demonstrates that his version with the shortened neck was perfectly capable of being accurate in the venue he chose. The point was to refute those who dislike the shortened neck feature.
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The bullet caster in me cringes to see a cartridge without a neck!Stan Ware’s Radical No-Neck Wolfpup Wildcat
View attachment 1435117
https://bulletin.accurateshooter.co...y-stan-wares-radical-no-neck-wolfpup-wildcat/
Getting around short action magnum speeds with a 308 length cartridge sounds spicy
I’m sure a long freebore and probably a powder like R26 help.
I’ll pass on a neck length like that.
either the designers ego or billfold imhoHard to imagine what void this cartridge is intended to fill.
I've seen this caliber in action from multiple guns with zero issues.There are some folks on Facebook preaching a wildcat called the “7mm Moses”. Claiming it can shoot at 7 Rem Mag and 7 PRC Speeds below at or below 65k PSI. It’s a 308 based case that looks to be fire-formed from a 7mm-08. Straight tapered body with a Weatherby styled shoulder.
Claim of 2921 FPS with 180 ELD-Ms out of a 28” barrel and at 3012 he blew out a primer.
I’m no ballistician, but these claims do not pass the sniff test with the pressures they claim. They have not done any testing with a pressure barrel as of yet and I don’t believe they will.
Thoughts? Over 65k PSI or not? Pic of the cartridge on the right.
Doesn’t mean it is not over pressure. The geometry of a cartridge helps with efficiency, as well as throat design and powder used. However, you can’t replace displacement entirely.I've seen this caliber in action from multiple guns with zero issues.
Just wanted to correct a couple of inaccuracies, and then ask a question to any members of the forum who might have, and are using pressure equipment.There are some folks on Facebook preaching a wildcat called the “7mm Moses”. Claiming it can shoot at 7 Rem Mag and 7 PRC Speeds below at or below 65k PSI. It’s a 308 based case that looks to be fire-formed from a 7mm-08. Straight tapered body with a Weatherby styled shoulder.
Claim of 2921 FPS with 180 ELD-Ms out of a 28” barrel and at 3012 he blew out a primer.
I’m no ballistician, but these claims do not pass the sniff test with the pressures they claim. They have not done any testing with a pressure barrel as of yet and I don’t believe they will.
Thoughts? Over 65k PSI or not? Pic of the cartridge on the right.
Personally, I don’t have enough experience with this case to comment intelligently. I can say that seating bullets in the unfired hydroformed case can be done using a 308Win micrometr seating die.Is there any correlation of a longer neck vs shorter neck on run out?
As I mentioned before, it would be of great interest to have some quantitative pressure data that causes early pressure signs.Doesn’t mean it is not over pressure. The geometry of a cartridge helps with efficiency, as well as throat design and powder used. However, you can’t replace displacement entirely.
I had roughly the same questions. That is why I’m getting a barrel made in 8 twist to start experimenting with the 308 Moses.This is simply another outstanding case of the nonsense that is going on in our sport. With the preponderance of safe, laboratory cartridges already on the market why would anyone be interested in something like this? Hard to imagine what void this cartridge is intended to fill.
Low SDs (single digit) seem much easier to obtain with the Moses than the parent case Is it the neck? I don’t know. What little I have seen so far 0.002” of neck tension holds the bullet solidly when the shank/boat tail junction sits 0.005” above the neck/shoulder junction which translates to 0.120” of bearing surface grasped by the neck. I’ve tested this by measuring the run out before and after dropping the a dummy round at an oblique angle from 3 ft. I saw no change in run out.The neck is a joke at best.