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KWK
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smokeless military rolling blocks
Mar 4th, 2005 at 7:55am
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In what chamberings did Remington export their smokeless, military rolling blocks?  What was the performance of those cartridges at that time?

I'm aware of the 8mm Lebel and the 7.62 Russian.  Late loads for both these seem rather hot for a rolling block, so were the originals loaded for weaker versions of these cartridges?
  

Karl
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MI-shooter
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #1 - Mar 4th, 2005 at 12:19pm
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Many #5 rollers were chambered for the 7x57 Mauser. I am not aware of separate loading for rollers vs say the Mauser bolt rifles. Being a forged steel action, it was considered to be considerably stronger than the old cast actions. With that said, be sure to have a competent gunsmith familiar with rollers inspect any action prior to use. Lots of well meaning people may have made an unsafe modifiction prior to the next owner who shoots it.
  
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waterman
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #2 - Mar 5th, 2005 at 1:53am
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The #5 rollers in 7x57 are reported to all have headspace problems.  Since the condition is widespread, Remington may have had a different set of specs when preparing their chamber reamers.  But I have shot factory 7x57 loads in mine and compared the fired cases with empties from 2 7x57 bolt actions (an 1895 Chilean and a 1935 Oberndorf) .  I cannot tell any difference, and the fired cases from any of the rifles will chamber in the others.  Nevertheless, I keep my cases for the roller segregated, neck-size only & never shoot anything hot.  With jacketed bullets, my beat up military roller will shoot far better than its primitive sights.

That said, I know of a nicely remodeled #5 rebarreled in the 1950s to .257 Roberts.  It has gone from father to son and now to grandson.  I don't think it has missed a hunting season in almost 50 years.  The owners only shoot factory ammo.

Back in the late 1930s, Phil Sharpe wrote of shooting a #5 military 7x57 equipped with a target scope with handloads in the 60,000 psi range and getting amazingly small groups.  Sharpe declined to give the load, but said it was a dandy and gave results that he had not imagined the rifle capable of.
  
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JDSteele
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #3 - Mar 5th, 2005 at 12:24pm
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I possess an early model #5 in 7x57 with the sliding extractor. I had heard the tales of excess headspace all my life & so immediately checked mine when I received it. Imagine my surprise & happiness when I discovered that the rifle's headspace was just fine! And this is a WELL-used rifle, not a GOOD used rifle, bore very dark but rifling is still stong. I originally bought it for the action but it could easily become a shooter in the original calber & barrel if I ever get one of those tuit thingies & take it down offa the project wall.

I've never personally seen or heard of a roller action that was blown up. Kinda like Mauser blowups, I know that they're possible but have never actually seen one do anything but stretch, except in Ackley's old blowup tests of the '50s. With rollers, I'm more concerned with case separations due to the action's built-in spring & flexure. IMO any factory load is safe in most of the older loadings e.g. 7x57, 30-40, 257 Roberts, 8mm Lebel, 8x57, 9x57 etc. It's when the shooter starts reloading that the trouble becomes really possible due to case stretching and overloading. Of course some of the modern +P loads have higher pressures but IMO this shouldn't be a problem in factory loads with brand-new brass & proper headspace.

Questions: have any of you ever seen a blown-up roller? If so, will you describe it for us? Have any of you ever actually checked your 7x57 headspace with gauges? I've talked with at least one person who has checked his rifle's headspace & found it to be normal, have not talked to anyone who has actually found excessive headspace in their #5. Makes one wonder, no?
TIA, Joe

BTW the opinions expressed above are worth exactly what they cost ya. Good luck, Joe
  
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singelshotman
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #4 - Mar 5th, 2005 at 1:42pm
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I once owned a 7 x 57mm #5, shot it a lot and had no trouble-except the case necks were blown about .015 oversize every
time it was fired-but you must rebember this-ALL OLD MILITARY RIFLES HAVE OVERSIZE CHAMBERS, THEY WERE MADE THAT WAY. It is stupid to use commerical standards to military rifles that were made to shot in mud, dirt, etc. Read Dunlaps book "Gunsmithing"-he said every 8mm mauser 98 he checked for headspace had excess headspace-EVERY ONE.To a logical mind it is clear they were made that way for functioning. He also said if the krauts could shoot'em that way then you could too. The truth is headspace is overrated-iv'e owned lots of old single-shots over the years and everyone had excess headspace, esp. the winchester high wall
  
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Dale53
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #5 - Mar 5th, 2005 at 11:41pm
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A few years ago, at Friendship, IN at a black powder cartridge silhouette match, I had a chance to examine a Remington Rolling Block actioned rifle that had failed. Examination showed that the barrel had apparently failed sometime before the action (cracked) as there was evidence that it had been fired some time before the final failure. No idea what precipitated the failure. 

Anything can fail and often does when pushed beyond design limits. I would think that it would be prudent to remember that any Roller action would be in the vicinity of 100 years old and many things could have happened between the years of manufacture and today. I would personally not be interested in shooting ANY roller with loads that exceed 40,000 lbs PSI.

Frankly, I think that a #5 Roller is such a perfect candidate for a BPCR Silhouette rifle, that I doubt that I would use anything but pure black. Black powder is not necessarily an "inferior" powder, you know Grin

Dale53
  
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singelshotman
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #6 - Mar 6th, 2005 at 4:48am
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I did read of a blown-up RB in Guns ilus. about 1995-it was a classic case of a man duplexing black powder with the wrong powder measeures-he had two of the old style B &  M measures(brass tubes, that you can't see thru) one was filled with FFG and one with 4227 i think, he got his measures mixed up and used a small charge of Black powder and a case full of 4227-blew up like a bomb.This of course coun't happen with a ideal #6 measure or a pope flask. I have duplexed for thirty years now and never had any trouble.it's so dry usually in CA(not this year) that blow tubes are of no use and i'm too
lazy to clean every shot. I don't like smokeless powder in Black powder guns, it's too dangerous.
  
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KWK
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #7 - Mar 6th, 2005 at 6:43am
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I've been hoping to get a No. 5 from Lone Star, but wonder just how much "reserve" the action has for the .30-40.  Not that I need to go beyond factory performance, but as a reloader, I like to have some room for error.   

Dave H. reported this as to a 7 mm he owned:

[quote]Last year I had an original 1901 military 7MM rolling block let go with factory loads. When I retreived the parts I discovered that the bottom of the receiver ring had an old crack that ran two thirds of the way from the rear toward the front of the receiver. That was one of the cleanest and tightest 7MM I have seen. Needless to say, I survived the ordeal but it ruptured my left eardrum and it took several weeks to get all the shrapnel out of my left arm.[/quote]

The Lebel is one fat cartridge (0.54") and the modern CIP pressure spec for it is a whopping 50,000 (as measured with their crusher arrangement, which differs from SAAMI's).  If a sound roller can take a steady diet of that, it ought to take the .30-40 with ease, but are modern Lebels and rolling block Lebel's the same?   

I wonder.  There are many different performance figures available for the 8 Lebel.  Sharpe said the WW-I stuff (and the rollers were made for WW-I) ran 198 gn at 2370 in a 31.5" barrel.  I cranked this through QuickLoad, and it figures a rating of about 45 ksi with powders about as fast as Reloder 7, which I think was about as slow as they got then.

On the other hand, maybe the rollers were fed only surplus ammo made for the earlier Lebel rifles, which had lower performance -- but faster powders.   

I do wonder how much reserve there is in a modern roller...


  

Karl
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Spud
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #8 - Mar 6th, 2005 at 6:23pm
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Many years back I picked up a 1897 #1RB in 7 mm Mauser (sliding extractor). The action was nice & tight but the barrel & wood were a bit rough. It had 3 notches cut into the stock!! Before stripping the rifle for the action I decided to put a box of factory ammo down range. No problems at all, it shot well and the cases/primers looked OK. When I went to unscrew the barrel, imagine my surprise/shock horror when the barrel unscrewed in my hand. The moral...play safe & check everything before pulling that trigger for the first time...I sure learnt my lesson! I might have been the forth notch!
Spud
  
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JDSteele
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #9 - Mar 6th, 2005 at 10:04pm
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Dave, I guess I gave the wrong impression. I wasn't doubting that rollers blow up, I was mainly looking for specific info on exactly HOW they fail. From the replies posted so far, it appears to me that many roller failures can be assumed to be caused by either old cracks or barrel failures. Modern barrels aren't likely to fail with normal loads, and old cracks can be ID'd by various tests. So using these old rifles is still a viable option if we use a little common sense.

Over the years I've seen a number of blown-up bolt action rifles and they generally fall into two categories, the stretchers (e.g. Mausers, high # Springfields) and the shatterers (e.g. M70s, low # Springfields, 1917 Enfields). Of course a barrel failure will cause a stretcher to shatter, so the failure mode must be considered. It was my belief that the rollers are stretchers rather than shatterers except they stretch at a lower pressure than most, but the descriptions above may tend to show otherwise except that we don't know the exact circumstances of each. Still looking for more info.
Regards, Joe

PS BTW the two rifles I've NEVER seen blown up are the Ruger No 1 and the Rem 600/700 series. Not saying they can't be blown, just saying I've never seen or heard of it. Have seen many 700s with blown case heads and the bolt literally brazed to the receiver, but they were fine after cleaning. In one of Ackley's Handbooks there's a picture of a Win M70 receiver after a blown case head, it's in many many pieces. Go figure.
  
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waterman
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #10 - Mar 7th, 2005 at 2:03am
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I know in theory that Remington made the #5 in 8mm Lebel. but I've never seen one.  But did they make them in 7.62 Russian?  Remington made Moisin-Nagants for the Czarist gov't., but did they make rollers?

If you have one in Lebel, it should be OK for .30/40, as long as you stick to loads OK for Krags.  The roller is probably tougher.

Now I can tell my roller story.  Serious collectors, grab your hankies.  Back in 1954, I dragged home an 1870 Springfield Navy roller in .50-70.  It had been cut down to carbine length.  But I wanted a shotgun to take pheasant hunting.  My grandfather was a machinist & blacksmith of the old school.  In 1954, .50-70 brass was non-existant, but you could buy .410s at the local gas station and .410s were within my lawn mowing & paper route budget.  So my grandfather, no gunsmith, reamed out the breech end of the barrel and brazed in a piece of pipe, into which I was supposed to stick a .410 shell.  The pipe had a longitudinal seam, but what the heck, those were only shotgun shells.  The extractor no longer worked, so I was given a home-made screw-together combination cleaning rod and shell extractor and a small hammer to whack out the fired case.  After a half dozen shots, the seam let go and the paper cartridge case ruptured.  The gas cracked the thumb piece on the block (but I killed the pheasant).

Grandfather looked at the broken thumb piece and said the cast metal had crystalized, so he drilled out both sides of the break, inserted a small steek pin and brazed the thumb piece back on the breech block.  By that time, I had saved up enough to buy a 20 ga. Mossberg, so we never shot the repaired roller.  Probably just as well.
  
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PETE
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #11 - Mar 7th, 2005 at 5:01pm
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Waterman,

  I see God loves you too!  Smiley I'll bet a thread called "Things I have done and lived to tell about" would make for some hair raising tales.

PETE
  
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KWK
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #12 - Mar 7th, 2005 at 7:23pm
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I've found claims for the 7.62 Russian and 8 Lebel in two different books.  I've never seen such rifles.  The books were "Rifles of the World", 2nd ed., John Walter, 1998, Krause Publ.; and "The Rifle in America", Philip Sharpe, 1938.  De Hass's 2nd book on single shots also mentions the Lebel.
  

Karl
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waterman
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Re: smokeless military rolling blocks
Reply #13 - Mar 12th, 2005 at 2:53am
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Years back, I had a Bannerman catalog from the early 1930s that listed military-surplus rollers in 8mm Lebel for sale.  Also, the English-language translation of "Military Rifle & Machine Gun Cartridges" by Jean Huon lists the 7 x57 rifles we know about, plus 8mm Lebel for 1915 Remington Rolling Blocks, 7.65 x 54 Mauser for 1902 Remingtons and 8x58R Danish Krag for rollers made in Norway, Sweden & Denmark.  Huon goes on at length about the 7.62 Moisin-Nagant, but does not say anything about rollers.  He lists the 7.62 M-N as a chambering for "1915 Winchesters" which were 1895 Winchester muskets, not single shots.

Sharpe (The Rifle in America) does say that Remington made rollers in 8mm Lebel and 7.62 Russian, but he does not say that Remington also made Lebel and Moisin-Nagant rifles, and maybe that is where some of the confusion originates.  Look at the Remington listing in Flayderman's Guide.

Sharpe also says that if your roller is marked Remington-UMC, it was made after 1910.
  
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