GotRDid
Gold $$ Contributor
Phase Plasma Rifle in the 40 watt range.
Phase Plasma Rifle in the 40 watt range.
This is exactly why I love my Tikka in 7x57.There are two problems with the 7X57 and all of this period's designs for the modern cartridge developer.
The first, and absolutely fundamental problem, is that they don't fit modern 'short' actions and magazines like the AI and MDT designs. Any rifle manufacturer producing a modern long action will only do so for much larger and higher performance magnum class chamberings. (Actually, the 7X57 and others are neither short nor long, but in-betweeners. When UK company BSA designed its own actions and rifles after WW2, it initially made them in three action lengths, including a 'medium' which was used for the 7X57. The importance of that cartridge in some markets in the 1950s was such that the first build of medium action BSA 'Hunter' models were 7mm Mausers not 308 Win, and they were produced before the company launched its long action version in 30-06 and 270 Win. The 'short action' was built around the 222 Rem and was also used for 22 Hornet, and later 223 Rem.)
Secondly, the cartridges were all saddled with modest maximum pressures when more recent post-war designs were moving up to the 60,000 psi mark, or even higher. Even though redesigned cartridges based on these cases could legitimately be higher pressure (as in 6mm Rem and the Roberts), manufacturers were likely discouraged by the fear of being smeared with the 'ancient, low-pressure' reputation.
I would say there there is not much left undone.There is rarely anything completely new in cartridge development these days.
I always surprised how easy it is to promote something as new with exaggerated claims for a minor difference. These are the times we live in now. Promition and profit is how I see it.I would there there is not much left undone.
I was shooting a 6.5-08 AI in the 90's for High Power Rifle Silhouette before Remington commercialized the non-AI version so David Tubb could use it for the Hunter Rifle classification of the game.
Hornnady is very good at taking something that is only a minor differance and promoting it.
This is exactly why I love my Tikka in 7x57.
No issues with action size and no issues with loading at modern day pressures.
Very fun cartridge and easy to tune. Brass has gone over 12 reloads so far.
I’m ready with my Slim Whitman Albums
The cartridge that I read the most about lately is the 7/6.5 PRC or the variation with your name of it, the 7PRCW. There is even a thread on this forum about loads being pressure tested. What are your thoughts about it making the jump into the hunting world? In particular, how it compares to the 280AI, another well regarded 7mm? Thanks.Maybe not the next but my favorite story about a new cartridge by FAR is told by Richard Schatz. When he first came to Deep Creek with a 6mm Dasher when the big stuff was still king. I just love that story.
In all directions, lol.30 1000c4 doesn't use powder, C4 instead over 100,000 FPS
shortened 284 necked to .25 calA shortened .284 win case is the answer
It would be ballistically very close to the 280 ai. Its already being used by some for hunting. While it is popular in F Class, you cant even compare it to the popularity of something like the 6.5 prc.The cartridge that I read the most about lately is the 7/6.5 PRC or the variation with your name of it, the 7PRCW. There is even a thread on this forum about loads being pressure tested. What are your thoughts about it making the jump into the hunting world? In particular, how it compares to the 280AI, another well regarded 7mm? Thanks.
It will be called the Tesla Gun.An electro magnetic rifle that shoots a tungsten bullet 7mm by 6 inches in length with a BC of 15.0 at about 6000FPS. that runs on a 9 volt battery that last a year.
Government can't confiscate it, it will be protected under the "Green New Deal".It will be called the Tesla Gun.
For a while I thought that there might be a new family of cartridges based on the 300 RCM or the slightly smaller 338 RCM cases. The 6.5 PRC, based on the 338 RCM case may well be the only one, it seems. I eventually realized that much of the "magnum" performance of RCM cartridges was due to Hornady's superformance powders. I now suspect that the performance of the RCM family would probably be too close to the 30-06 family to be seen as a significant upgrade.It would be ballistically very close to the 280 ai. Its already being used by some for hunting. While it is popular in F Class, you cant even compare it to the popularity of something like the 6.5 prc.
You are right in one way!!! If it was made by Federal, it was modernized or made to accommodate the new higher pressure loads. The cases that could not handle modern day smokeless powders were imported and could have had the BERDAN PRIMERS AND PRIMER POCKETS!!! But, the really old military cartridges which used the old smokeless powder were designed for lower chamber pressures are long gone!!! The really corrosive mercury primers used in those days dissolved the brass and surplus was demilled with the brass being recycled!!!I just remembered this from years ago on Benchrest.com.
The discussion centered around the pressure limitations on old cartridges. To be exact, could you load a 7x 57 to the same pressures in a modern rifle as a 308 Winchester. Many posted said that these cartridges were antiquated, they could never be fired at todays pressures. Even in modern firearms.
A shooter, now deceased, took a Federal 7x57 case and a Federal 308 case and split them lengthways. Laying them side by side, aside from the added length of the 7x57, the inside, from the case wall at the base to the thickness of the base, they were identical . .
Federal probably started with the exact same material, and up until the forming process reached the final trim to length and forming, the cases were identical.
This is why you can take a modern 7x57 case, (based on a case invented in 1892), neck it down to 6mm, Ackley Improve it, making it a 6mm Ackley, and shoot it at 58,000+psi.
Pics coming, since most of my work has been based on theshortened 284 necked to .25 cal