• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Thoughts about 7x47L

Has anyone played around with the idea of 7x47L. (Why heck, we can call it the 747 Boeing.) That would be a 6.5x47 Lapua case necked up to 7mm. It sounds like it could be a very efficient cartridge using a 450 CCI primer and some slower burning powder such as RL19 or H4831. There is a large selection of 7mm bullets from 100 grains going all the way up to 168 grainers and higher. I don't know, maybe I've been thinking too much!
 
I don't know, maybe I've been thinking too much!
.............. Funny how much of that happens this time of year. I'm certainly no ballistics expert or engineer but, if .25X47L's are working well (and they are) then why not a 7X47L? The question, it seems, is why didn't Lapua choose a 7mm bullet over the 6.5? Just food for thought.
 
There is some information on Snipershide about 7Creedmoor, should be close to a 7x47
 
gotcha said:
I don't know, maybe I've been thinking too much!
.............. Funny how much of that happens this time of year. I'm certainly no ballistics expert or engineer but, if .25X47L's are working well (and they are) then why not a 7X47L? The question, it seems, is why didn't Lapua choose a 7mm bullet over the 6.5? Just food for thought.
Lapua did not make any 7 mm bullets when they came out with the 6,5x47.
Filippo
 
I've done one,... very effecient,...works really well with heavies,.... Varget works well,.... all the way down to Hodgdon 322. Very versatile cartridge.

Rifle1
 
RIFLE1 said:
I've done one,... very effecient,...works really well with heavies,.... Varget works well,.... all the way down to Hodgdon 322. Very versatile cartridge.

Rifle1
How many grains of powder are you running and what sort of velocity are you getting? Did you run the standard shoulder angle? I'm thinking this would make for a great cartridge for my next specialty pistol build
 
Seems LONG ago, Elgin Gates did a 7mm IHMSA.....knew a fellow who had one.......did not do anything a 7/08 will do....
 
Is there anything that you gain over a 7-08 other than being different? Kind of like the 260Rem/6.5-47L/6.5 Cred triplets?
 
I've done one,... very effecient,...works really well with heavies,.... Varget works well,.... all the way down to Hodgdon 322. Very versatile cartridge.

Rifle1

I'm patiently waiting...what weight of bullet, what velocity?
 
The short answer is yes. Nothing new. Called the 7mm IHMSA.

The 7x47mm concept was developed by my good friend John Adams, the founder of IHMSA, and was “THE HOT NUMBER” in handgun silhouette for over 10 years. The cartridge is based on a neck downed 300 Savage case (measuring 47mm long), and takes the large rifle primer, and had a sharp aprox. 38 degree shoulder. Loading data was published in most of the reloading manuals of the time. IMR 4895 and WW 748 were popular with 160 to 168 grain bullets which were just the ticket to take over the hard set rams of the day. 175 Sierra's shot well in my XP100 as well. Later on Elgin Gates took credit for it when he was heading up IHMSA,

I built, and still have, a 7mm IHMSA or 7mm x 47mm, rifle built with a Rem. 700 action, with a match Hart barrel. It is a truly fine shooter.

I see the reamers are available from Pacific Tool. I also see dies on ebay all the time for this chamber.

Sure you could change the shoulder angle, or move the shoulder back and make it into something else if one wants to. All the ground work has been done without having to make custom dies at a big cost. And all you have to do is fire form a 6.5x47 Lapua case in the chamber if you want a small primer.

Photos below; 7mm IHMSA on left - 6x47mm on right. And the IHMSA headstamp.
 

Attachments

  • 77a.jpg
    77a.jpg
    30.2 KB · Views: 144
  • 79a.jpg
    79a.jpg
    18.5 KB · Views: 93
Alo:
You want loading suggestions ? It's all done for you.
back in 1967 I developed a cartridge that I named the "7mm IHMSA".
The original tool was ground, hands on by Dave Kiff of Pacific tool fame
while he worked for Jim at JGS.

I donated the design and name to the IHMSA organization that was being
run by Elgin Gates at the time. I was still very involved with them as I was the
original founder of IHMSA.

If you look up 7mm IHMSA on the internet you will find thousands of loads.
The hornady Bullet Co. ( Ron Reiber ) borrowed my personal gun to do the
load development with for their loading manual.

loading dies are readily available from RCBS. The made the original loading dies.

As far as bullets go the Hornady 162 grn. spbt was "The bullet" to use. The 140
grn. from Speer was also a good choice. But, were not as reliable on the hard
set rams. The powder of choice was H-4895 with W-W 748 as a backup.
Velocity out of a 16" pistol was 2450 fps. But the 162 grn. spbt was a
sure thing on the hard set steel rams.

The 7mm IHMSA brass was formed by using 300 Savage cases In my
development of this cartridge I found that was much easier to neck down
a .30 caliber case than it was to neck up a .22-250 case. The can can be fire
formed from .22-250, 6.5x47 Lapua, Rem.br brass, The 250 / .300 Savage
and later on it was mfg. by Federal with the 7mm IHMSA headstamp. I believe
they made at least 150000 of them, I have lots both in nickle and brass.
John
 
i mocked one up... Peaked my interest. but what does it give up to the 7-08? It would have better brass but at the expense of a reamer and custom dies.

I've done a .20, and a .25 and have a 6mm and 6.5 why not a 7mm


SDH
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,252
Messages
2,215,051
Members
79,496
Latest member
Bie
Back
Top