My Dad gave me his Savage 110 270 and asked me to work up a load for him. It's an older model with wood stock. Not exactly sure of the year, but I'd guess it's a '70s or '80s model. It's got an absolutely fantastic trigger. Of course, well in the pre-Accu-trigger days, but it pulls right at 2 lbs and crisp as a cold Coke on a August Mississippi afternoon.
All I had was 3-4x fired brass from my Model 70 and a Remington 700, so I chose about 25 good-looking cases and FL sized them. I loaded up 3-4 different loads, all at least 1-3 grains below max, so NOT hot loads. I started shooting them at the range, and I noticed that every single case was separating at the head. Some broke completely in two, and others just cracked or showed the thinning line. After a few rounds I just stopped. The only thing i could figure at the time was that the brass was older than I thought or I had set the shoulders back too far and the Savage was stretching the brass because of excessive headspace. When I got home I measured the fired, mostly-separating brass and it had stretched up to .025" from trim length.
So I loaded up some brand new Remington brass without sizing it in any way. I measured 8 cases and they all measured 3.231". I loaded up RL22 for these loads and the 130 grain Speer Boattails I've been working with. The round fired ok, but when I returned home I measured them and this brass, too, stretched significantly. Most measured right at 3.250", so again the stretch was about .02".
Does this rifle just have a "sloppy" chamber? Once the new brass is fireformed in this rifle will the stretching slow or stop? I spoke to a gunsmith today about it, and his answer was, "Yeah, some rifles are just like that - big chambers - and they can be really tough on brass, short case life." I asked was this indicative of a problem - perhaps one that could be rectified - and he said, "No. some reamers just cut it too big, and that's the nature of that gun. I wouldn't worry about it, just maybe tell your dad to use factory ammo and save yourself the frustration and cost of short case life."
Was I advised correctly?
Thanks,
Jake
All I had was 3-4x fired brass from my Model 70 and a Remington 700, so I chose about 25 good-looking cases and FL sized them. I loaded up 3-4 different loads, all at least 1-3 grains below max, so NOT hot loads. I started shooting them at the range, and I noticed that every single case was separating at the head. Some broke completely in two, and others just cracked or showed the thinning line. After a few rounds I just stopped. The only thing i could figure at the time was that the brass was older than I thought or I had set the shoulders back too far and the Savage was stretching the brass because of excessive headspace. When I got home I measured the fired, mostly-separating brass and it had stretched up to .025" from trim length.
So I loaded up some brand new Remington brass without sizing it in any way. I measured 8 cases and they all measured 3.231". I loaded up RL22 for these loads and the 130 grain Speer Boattails I've been working with. The round fired ok, but when I returned home I measured them and this brass, too, stretched significantly. Most measured right at 3.250", so again the stretch was about .02".
Does this rifle just have a "sloppy" chamber? Once the new brass is fireformed in this rifle will the stretching slow or stop? I spoke to a gunsmith today about it, and his answer was, "Yeah, some rifles are just like that - big chambers - and they can be really tough on brass, short case life." I asked was this indicative of a problem - perhaps one that could be rectified - and he said, "No. some reamers just cut it too big, and that's the nature of that gun. I wouldn't worry about it, just maybe tell your dad to use factory ammo and save yourself the frustration and cost of short case life."
Was I advised correctly?
Thanks,
Jake