Shawn -
Howdy !
The main idea is to keep the powder combustion " turbulence point " within the case neck, an idea championed by former Savage arms engineer
Robert Greenleaf. His " 6BG " wildcat uses a .300Savage " Go Gauge ". It has a 30* shoulder angle to help address barrel life concerns.
What I did was: have my riflesmith' run a 6mm Remington reamer in " short " for a nominal .466" base diam, to make my " DEEP 6 " wildcat.
Deep 6 has 51.2gr H2O case capacity, compared to things like .243Win, 6SLR, and 6mm Remington; which are in the 54-55gr H2O capacity range;
I believe. DEEP 6 has more case capacity than 6 X 47L and 6XC, which I think run around 49gr H2O.
Deep6 cases are formed by running 7 X 64 Brenneke brass up-into a stock 6.5 X 55 Swedish FL die, that has its internal removed to make the die open-topped. Cases emerge from the form die @ .22" calibre, and can be neck turned and inside neck reamed as needed.... to form either a .224" cal wildcat, DEEP 6; a .25" calibre variant; or of course a 6.5mm version. As specifically regards "DEEP 6" ...... No custom reamers, No custom dies are required to form, load/re-load the cases.
Instead of using a fire-formed 30 or 35* shoulder angle, DEEP 6 features the same long VLD-friendly neck the 6mm Remington has.
It is a valid 1,000yd-capable varmint/target cartridge, when using the appropriate bullet(s).
In the pic, " DEEP 6 " is in the middle.... between the " 6.5 Kiwi " wildcat on the left; and my
" .22-35 Remington " wildcat on the right. I beleive DEEP 6 shows a 95 VLD seated.
With regards,
357Mag