Hypothetically, if one has a chamber that is 1.570inches in total length and has a cartridge that is 1.550 and his reamer freebore is a nominal .025"; does that mean that he really has .045 " of actual FB ?
The FB dimension is referenced off the case length. So to answer your question, it's still .025 FB. You will simply have less bearing surface in the case.Hypothetically, if one has a chamber that is 1.570inches in total length and has a cartridge that is 1.550 and his reamer freebore is a nominal .025"; does that mean that he really has .045 " of actual FB ?
No. FB will not change by using a shorter caseI guess it boils down to semantics. In other words, the "effective" freebore in my example is .045 " and the technical FB is .025. Many years ago while ordering a reamer from Hugh Henriksen, he tried to explain this to me.
I did not say that. The effective freebore will be altered by a LONGER chamber.No. FB will not change by using a shorter case
I am not sure you fully understand. If you change your chamber length on your reamer and specify .025 FB, it will still be a 25 thou freebore no matter how you look at it. Only way you change the freebore is to cut it or built into reamer. I'm really confused as what you are questioning. Can you elaborate more on your terminology of "effective" FB? Nominal to me is a number in the middle of a tolerance range.I did not say that. The effective freebore will be altered by a LONGER chamber.
Whether the FB is called freebore or whether the neck portion of the chamber is longer than that of the cartridge, both will cause the distance the bullet must be seated out to touch the lands and that distance is the effective freebore. It may not be CALLED freebore but it serves the same purpose. Hugh Henriksen is one of our premier reamer makers and he went to great detail to explain why freebore is often misunderstood. I understand what you are saying about FB and it amounts to the nomenclature used. But the reality of the matter is that the length that the neck portion is cut does IN EFFECT alter the REAL FB. Good shooting....JamesI am not sure you fully understand. If you change your chamber length on your reamer and specify .025 FB, it will still be a 25 thou freebore no matter how you look at it. Only way you change the freebore is to cut it or built into reamer. I'm really confused as what you are questioning. Can you elaborate more on your terminology of "effective" FB? Nominal to me is a number in the middle of a tolerance range.
I am not sure you fully understand. If you change your chamber length on your reamer and specify .025 FB, it will still be a 25 thou freebore no matter how you look at it. Only way you change the freebore is to cut it or built into reamer. I'm really confused as what you are questioning. Can you elaborate more on your terminology of "effective" FB? Nominal to me is a number in the middle of a tolerance range.
James,Whether the FB is called freebore or whether the neck portion of the chamber is longer than that of the cartridge, both will cause the distance the bullet must be seated out to touch the lands and that distance is the effective freebore. It may not be CALLED freebore but it serves the same purpose. Hugh Henriksen is one of our premier reamer makers and he went to great detail to explain why freebore is often misunderstood. I understand what you are saying about FB and it amounts to the nomenclature used. But the reality of the matter is that the length that the neck portion is cut does IN EFFECT alter the REAL FB. Good shooting....James
Please explain in further detail. To me freebore is freebore. It's cut...no changing it. If you trim your case and call it the "real freebore" and saying it effects the freebore cut, that's beyond me. I'm just not understanding the point here.James,
You are 100% correct!
Bart
No you have not!Please explain in further detail. To me freebore is freebore. It's cut...no changing it. If you trim your case and call it the "real freebore" and saying it effects the freebore cut, that's beyond me. I'm just not understanding the point here.
Let's say I have a 1.560 chamber length with a freebore of .150. I trim my case to 1.550. Now from how I understand this, it altered my effective freebore by .010?
Please explain in further detail. To me freebore is freebore. It's cut...no changing it. If you trim your case and call it the "real freebore" and saying it effects the freebore cut, that's beyond me. I'm just not understanding the point here.
Let's say I have a 1.560 chamber length with a freebore of .150. I trim my case to 1.550. Now from how I understand this, it altered my effective freebore by .010?
Yes, that is my point from the beginning. The freebore length dimension comes off the chamber length. I explained the identical thing early on regarding two reamers with same freebore but different chamber lengths. The seated OAL to lands is different. Giving the reamer is cut correctly.I deal with this all the time trying fit bullets to a customer’s chamber.
For example two reamers for a 6PPC made by the same manufacturer.
Reamer 1 has .045 Freebore and case length of 1.500
Reamer 2 has .045 Freebore and a case length of 1.520
In order to get to the rifling with Reamer 2 the bullet will have to be seated .020 further out of the case than Reamer 1.
Another way to think of it is Reamer 2’s Freebore will be cut .020 deeper into the barrel.
Hope this helps!
Bart
Yes, that is my point from the beginning. The freebore length dimension comes off the chamber length. I explained the identical thing early on regarding two reamers with same freebore but different chamber lengths. The seated OAL to lands is different. Giving the reamer is cut correctly.
I'm just lost in regard to changing the case length on the brass changes the freebore thing. This is being confused early on with different terminology. Only way freebore is going to change is if you cut it or erosion, period.
Actual FB, effective FB, nominal FB, real FB, true FB is way too loosely used to and I've never heard them referred to as they are here. I have Henriksen reamers and spoke to him numerous times.