Someone just posted this info in the last week or two on AS,Does anyone have a short, concise table showing the average velocity increase from standard to AI version for all cartridges? Just curious as to the % increase in each. Thanks guys
You are exactly right! Most of the cases I have improved, I did it to obtain a better case design, not to obtain more velocity. Any velocity increase is merely the icing on the cake>>>>the "cake" is a better case design for what I do, which is F-Open.. "Generally" an "Acklyized" case develops a shade better accuracy and they cut W-A-Y down on case trimming, which I detest!It really all depends on the parent case and how much taper it has. Some cases gain a higher percentage of case capacity than does others. Cases that are already fairly straight-ish and very little taper, such as the 223, 243/260/308 cases or the 06, will gain very little when you "improve" them but others, like the 220 Swift, Rem 6mm, 6.5X55 Swede, and 338 Lapua, have a lot more taper and will increase a much higher percentage.
Can just anyone design a case and call it an Ackley? Should credit be given to the cases PO did? You can call it improved or in my case I call it a NAFA. DDoes anyone have a short, concise table showing the average velocity increase from standard to AI version for all cartridges? Just curious as to the % increase in each. Thanks guys
Isn't the new 6 GT very similar in performance? With better brass of course.Years ago, I shot a 6/250 AI on Rock Chucks, p. dogs, and coyotes. I am surprised that the case has not been tried with 115's today.
Agree with everything said by everyone. But surprised that no one has mentioned you can walk in a store, buy a box of factory ammo, and fire it in your Ackley (with great accuracy). Coming out of the chamber is a case with all the benefits everyone has gushed over.I believe "Ackley Improved" cases are a stroke of genius.
Isn't the new 6 GT very similar in performance? With better brass of course.
CW
Similar but slower. The 6-250AI is more like an Ackley version of the 6mm Creedmoor. Very close to .243 Win velocities.Isn't the new 6 GT very similar in performance? With better brass of course.
CW
Gotcha, thanksSimilar but slower. The 6-250AI is more like an Ackley version of the 6mm Creedmoor. Very close to .243 Win velocities.
One of the defining factors about Ackley’s is they are designed to headspace the parent case at the neck/shoulder junction so that they don’t have any case head separation issues when fire forming. Most but not all had 40 deg shoulders Along with fairly minimal body taper, but not straight without any taper. And technically only cases designed by P.O. Ackley are true Ackley’s but it has unofficially expanded to newer cases designed after his death that have the same parameters.Can just anyone design a case and call it an Ackley? Should credit be given to the cases PO did? You can call it improved or in my case I call it a NAFA. D
I believe this is what you are looking for:
http://gunloads.com/castboolits/attachment.php?attachmentid=28589&d=1295041970
It's a PDF file. I tried to paste it here, but the forum editor is confused by it somehow, hence the link.
Please consider: The improvement figures are for velocity, not case capacity. The "% increase" listings are somewhat misleading in several cases, since the parent cartridge velocities cited are the manufacturers' and often much lower than what an older cartridge may be easily pushed to in a modern rifle, while the AI velocities listed are what may be realized. If you read Ackley's books and inspect his reported velocities carefully, you may ken that he loaded to higher pressures than what most people consider prudent today. So the alleged improvement assumes a low factory velocity and an optimistic AI velocity.
For example, the "Factory Velocity" given for 250 Savage 100-gr bullet is only 2820. But the Sierra manual lists a maximum for 100-gr bullet at 3000 fps (custom Mauser, 24-in barrel.) The original spec for 250 Savage had the Savage Model 99 lever action in mind, and a conservative max pressure of 45,000 CUP was stipulated. To become the first commercial cartridge to reach 3000 fps in 1915, they had to employ an 87-gr bullet. (Sierra today lists a max of 3200 for that pill.)
Now consider the improved velocity listed (100-gr pill). In the list it's 3300, but Sierra 250 AI data tops out at 3200. The velocity improvement in the list is 480 fps, but Sierra's improvement is only 200 fps, and that from a 26" AI barrel!
Anyway, a 17% velocity improvement for 250 AI is not realistic if you consider what the 250 Savage is really capable of unimproved, and that Ackley's top improved loads tended to be questionably hot.
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