Mulligan
Silver $$ Contributor
That looks like a darn handy gizmo!The Alpha Brass length out of the box fits my chamber perfectly. Maybe better than Lapua, which always comes out about 1.490 to 1.495 in length after fire forming. My reamer has a .050 throat.
Here is what the Alpha looks like in my chamber after about four firings. This case measures .1.510.View attachment 1663896
The print says 1.520Jackie,
How long is your chamber?
CW
Mine were .013-.0135. If I just skim them, my loaded O.D. will be .269. After firefoming they were 1.505ish, so I will make the case length longer just to keep from trimming a bunch off.The Alpha I have is going between .013 to .014 in wall thickness, as they are varying about .001 as I go around with the ball mic.
My chamber is .269, I turn them to just under .012.
Same as mine. Very happy with my AlphaMine were .013-.0135. If I just skim them, my loaded O.D. will be .269. After firefoming they were 1.505ish, so I will make the case length longer just to keep from trimming a bunch off.
My brother and I were shooting PPC's yesterday with the Alpha brass and we found (almost exactly) the same numbers as you did. Dropped the charge weight between .3 and .4 grains and the Garmin confirmed the velocity (3445ish) and accuracy was what we were looking for, and the ES was far more consistent. We confirmed it over 3 different rifles and 2 different barrel makers. Thanks for posting your results Jackie, we were thinking ours was a fluke.But I have found that the upper load widow is at least 4 tenths grain lower.
Doing a back to back test, my Lapua 6PPC gives great accuracy in my LV at 30.3 grains, yielding 3430 fps.
The same load out of the Alpha is too hot. The groups opened up a lot.
When I finally dropped it to 29.9, it came back. And to my surprise, the velocity in the Alpha at 29.9 was the same as the Lapua at 30.3.
All of this is with my own 68 grn boat out of a 21 1/2 inch long 13.5 Krieger.
Visually, there doesn’t seem to be that much difference in the two. But it seems there is enough to change the load window.
Overall, I am impressed with the Alpha 6PPC Brass. But then it seems so are a lot of other shooters.
Of course, there is also the fact that the Alpha actually starts out as a 6PPC, eliminating the initial fire forming just to get the Lapua formed into the 6PPC configuration.
I turn the necks on the Alpha, fire it once, and it’s ready.
I shoot them just like I did the old Bruno OO BT from way back when. A hard jam, to where the marks on the bullet are longer than they are wide.@jackieschmidt -- how far are you jamming your 68BT from Touch Point?
Thank You for sharing your experiences with the Alpha brass. I've been considering it but have two boxes of the Lapua brass to use first.
Ideally the sizing die should be based off your chamber. For me I use a JLC resizing die which is close to my chamber.I have 1.500 max case lenght,should i trim the case first?
And what sizing die everyone is using
What I have is 1.505 long out of the box so you would need to trim first.I have 1.500 max case lenght,should i trim the case first?
And what sizing die everyone is using
I trim to 1.490I have 1.500 max case lenght,should i trim the case first?
And what sizing die everyone is using
Yes, it's a very good idea to measure YOUR exact chamber length. PPC being a wildcat, can be quite a bit different from one reamer to another. There's no right or wrong about it, just different and you don't want your brass to be too long in your respective chamber, creating potentially very high pressures. It's just a very good practice to check this on every chamber/bbl, for safety. I've got ppc reamers both long and short. I think the shortest is 1.500 and the longest 1.520. So there can be enough difference to cause problems if one just assumes their chamber is the longer variation. It's a good idea, IMHO, to know the actual length on every chamber, not just a ppc.I trim to 1.490
ay 1.505 I trim back to 1.490