I will answer as many questions as I am capable of but I need your "guesses" on what I bought on Monday! The rifle started life as an older style bdl 700 Remington. Even has the aluminum butt plate. Action was trued by Mark Penrod and then he installed a Shilen med heavy barrel and chambered it in 22-250 A.I. The owner's brother did all the reloading for their rifles and this was one of them used on prairie dog hunts! The rig came with Redding deluxe dies, 274 loaded rounds and another 100+ brass all of Lapua brand! Rifle is glass bedded and floated by Penrod. I finished cleaning up the rifle, bore and scope and went to work reviewing and cleaning the dies. First, I found two bullet expanders of Redding mfg and another one in the f.l. die with .0085 smaller diameter!? Not sure of mfg as it was different color and design than the factory ones. Anyway, it is a much smaller diameter so bullet tension has to be high! The gentleman advised me that the bullets must be fired single fire as they are too long for the magazine! They are 60 grn Horn flat base h.p. First strange thing when I pulled the bullets is that they are seated only .058 into the neck! Yes, .058!! This must be the reason for the tight bullet tension expander?! First question: Would Penrod really chamber a rifle like this with the lands that far out or is this chamber eroded to beat hell?! Before you ask, I have not tried to determine where the lands are yet but a friend is going to drop off a Stoney point chamber tool. I will try the old fashioned way tomorrow but just wanted your thoughts on this! Next: The loads are 60 pt Horn h.p., 210 cci primer, 41.7 grns of 414 and as stated, Lapua brass. Needless to say, when I pulled the bullets using an inertia style bullet puller, they came out real easily! Next problem: The powder in all three loads was a combination stick powder and sperical as 414 should be! What in the hell is this? I loaded a lot of 414 20+ years ago and it certainly never had stick powder in it!! Any thoughts guys buy mainly on the chamber situation on this gun! Thanks, Tom