A member named John L has an interesting theory on the front page about overbore. Well thought out, and well presented.
That said, I have to disagree. Thirty years ago I did some research on the topic. My results, although limited to three or four cartridges I worked with. By his definition all were way overbore.
My results, however, contradicted some of his theories.
A better working definition has to take into account the purpose of the wildcat case.
Example 1: I built a 22-378 Wby AI. I was friends with Jimmy Knox, founder of JLK Bullets. I conned him into making the 80gr VLD that Sierra copied. I was able to shoot them close to 4500fps with a lot, a LOT of RVO-72.
I also built a 1:8 twist 22-284. Shot the same bullets 3600fps with a lot of RVO-62 (iirc, it's been 25 or 26 years now).
I am going to build another 22-284 based on the new Sierra MK.
My definition, for what it's worth: overbore is a cartridge you can't find a slow enough powder to shoot heavy for caliber bullets faster than anything else out there.
works for me...
Rich
That said, I have to disagree. Thirty years ago I did some research on the topic. My results, although limited to three or four cartridges I worked with. By his definition all were way overbore.
My results, however, contradicted some of his theories.
A better working definition has to take into account the purpose of the wildcat case.
Example 1: I built a 22-378 Wby AI. I was friends with Jimmy Knox, founder of JLK Bullets. I conned him into making the 80gr VLD that Sierra copied. I was able to shoot them close to 4500fps with a lot, a LOT of RVO-72.
I also built a 1:8 twist 22-284. Shot the same bullets 3600fps with a lot of RVO-62 (iirc, it's been 25 or 26 years now).
I am going to build another 22-284 based on the new Sierra MK.
My definition, for what it's worth: overbore is a cartridge you can't find a slow enough powder to shoot heavy for caliber bullets faster than anything else out there.
works for me...
Rich