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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block? (Read 38512 times)
frnkeore
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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #15 - Oct 17th, 2011 at 6:34pm
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I would love to find out, Ziggy but, I can't turn loose that much of any of my RB's. I will keep a eye out for something.

Thank you for offering,

Frank
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #16 - Oct 17th, 2011 at 11:42pm
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frnkeore wrote on Oct 6th, 2011 at 11:28pm:
From what I've read on RB's, no one can substantiate that the smokeless RB's were made of any different steel than the BP RB's. If there is a proven source of that info, I'd like to know about it.

Frank



Frank,

Anecdotal, but my own experience:  A #5 action is very hard to machine, and through hardened.  A #1 action is surface hardened, but once you get through the skin, it machines easily.  There may not be a lot of difference in the steel, but there is a huge difference in the heat treatment. 

I've heard the same from others that had the same experience.

On the smokeless question:  There are so many good rifles out there, why shoot smokeless in a rolling block?  The rolling block is definitely designed for lower pressure loads.  It cannot safely handle gas leaks.  If you have a compulsive need to shoot smokeless, it is relatively easy and cheap to buy a more appropriate .45-70 rifle that is definitely safe with smokeless.   

You can get away with it if you stick with trapdoor loads.  If you have a #5 action with small firing pin, correctlly fit up with a modern barrel, you can push that up a bit.  But, it will never be as strong or as safe as a high wall.  I have shot well over 10,000 rounds through my .45-90 rolling block.  But, I'm too conservative to shoot smokeless out of it, and it is a more modern smokeless action.  When I want to shoot smokeless .45-70, I use My Browning BPCR or Browning 1885 hunter model.   

An incidental reason to not use smokeless .45-70 loads in a Rolling Block:  I shoot IMR 4198 smokeless .45-70 in my BPCR.  A few years ago, we needed 400 rounds for a match at the last minute.  My son and I set up loading assembly line fashion, and drop measured the powder.  Some powder must have hung up, as we got light loads that hit low.  Others were very hot.  Not double charge, but hot.  I'm sure glad they weren't fired in my rolling block.

dave
  
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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #17 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 1:38am
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All I can say is that when the RB's are set up to shoot smokeless, i.e firing pin. I can see no reason not to. Many millions if not billions of smokeless rounds have been shot in the RB's, up to at least 45,000 CUP. If you want to be as safe as possible, drill a vent hole for the firing pin. But, please use safe loading habits as all reloaders should do. You can blow up almost any gun! Possibly even the Japanese made simi copy of the 1885 Winchester.

People that have made there living studying and researching all single shots, say that they are indeed safe to shoot with smokeless. I do take credence in people that do engineering studies and scientific testing but, I've seen neither in this discussion just opinions based on how they feel about this particular action. My own opinions are based on the work done by Frank DeHass and my research on these actions but, my opinion of the RB is based on the FACT that many million/billions of 40,000+ CUP rounds have been fired in the 1897 and 1902 actions. These are NOT junker actions!!! A friend in So Cal in the 80's had used his RB action as the basis for a high power BR rifle. I don't advacate hot rodding them but, I do advacate shooting them with smokeless PB pressure loads. If your man enough to shoot high pressure 45/70-90 500+ gr smokeless loads in a RB (or any other), I really don't think that the gun blowing up will hurt you either Wink

There are many success stories regarding the RB but, not many that are unsuccessful. My only issue with them is there slow lock time and have even toyed with making a lighten Titanium hammer for mine.

Anyone willing to start a discussion about not shooting thier Ballards with smokeless? Lips Sealed

Frank
« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2011 at 1:43am by frnkeore »  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #18 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 4:44am
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I'll continue to use smokeless in anything I want. It is far less destructive that BP.  I can load it to lower pressures than BP.  

It's not dangerous unless you double or triple charge a case or do something else dumb.  You'll have very similar bad results in a Ballard, Hepburn, Sharps, Maynard, Stevens, Lowall Tisdel, or even a hiwall or Ruger. 

So why single out the rolling block?  A safety feather in your cap? That is the politically correct thing to do these days. Warn us all of the dangers. 

How bout preaching safe loading procedures to earn your safety feather rather than vilifying one of our truly great and historic rifles? 

          Joe. 



« Last Edit: Oct 18th, 2011 at 5:49am by westerner »  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #19 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 8:20am
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Amen, Joe. Amen.
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #20 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 10:29am
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Some people have a difference risk tolerance than others.  Joe Westerner chooses to shoot smokeless in anything; I do not.  I don’t ride motorcycles; millions do.  I have an employee with a son in a wheelchair, unable to talk, eat, or help himself.  Motorcycle accident last August.  Acceptable risk to many, not to me.

In reference to millions/billions of smokeless rolling block loads fired, remember that the 7mm has a smaller case head, stronger brass, and that the military loads were tailored for that rifle, with pressures within the specific action capability and tested for such.  That history does not equate to shooting smokeless in any cartridge in any rolling block.  We don’t have the capability to test load our cartridges, but have to rely on very spotty data done by powder manufacturers.  And, the .45-70 case has considerable more base area.

The main problem with the rolling block is not strength, but gas handling.  I have had 3 case separations in mine, 2 leaked gas into my face.  Starline brass instead of stretched .45-70 cured that, but that has emphasized the design shortcoming to me.  The rolling block does not have a well sealed breech.

Loading safety is one part of the equation, in my case I choose to build in safeguards in my case selection, load selection, and action selection to further that safety.  I choose smaller cases that won’t double charge for smokeless loads.  I choose actions that have the strength to handle accidental overloads to give me an additional factor of safety.   

At the risk of being heretical, Frank DeHaas was a better writer than gun engineer.  Some of the things he advocated we would not readily accept today.

Bottom line is, the safety of, and limitations of an action are a legitimate part of a discussion.  By all means shoot smokeless in your rifle if you are comfortable doing it, and know how to safely.  But, do it with some idea of the risks and factors involved.

Dave
  
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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #21 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 1:53pm
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Dave, 
Let me help you out here. This will apply to your BP loads, too. Re fit your firing pin with no more than .002 clearance for the large diameter, and then drill two .078 diameter holes into the firing cavity, side to side or at top and side. If you really want to be safe drill three, top and both sides.

Next, after you fire a load, look at the juncture of the solid head to case wall area. If you see a stretch mark, throw that case away, do not shoot it again. That is how you get case head separations in a RB. When I get to that point in my 45/70, I back the load down. It sounds to me like you've reached that point in at least one of your BP loads. It's not dangerous as long as you don't reload those stretched cases. Black powder doesn't equate to safe. It's very slow burning and if you have a heavy enough bullet you can develop higher pressures. And of course, if you load multiple rounds to take to the range, be sure to visually inspect or use and dowel to check the depth of the powder before seating the bullet for smokeless. I only BS and load from the bench not a sure thing both safer than loading up a bunch of cases.

BTW, there is only a 15% difference between a 45/70 case head area and a 7mm. The 1.055 thread diameter is almost as large as the 1.062 of the 700 Rem bolt gun. There is slightly more difference in the root diameter. The barrel has to burst before catastrophic damage will occur. All modern re barreled RB's will have stronger than original barrel steel.

Frank 

PS
The RB was adapted to the 7mm and not designed for it. The 7mm Mauser/Spanish came out in 1893, I believe and the RB that was chambered for it came in '97. It was also chambered for the 7.62x54 Russian that has a even higher operating pressure and larger case head than the 7mm.
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #22 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 7:04pm
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Frank,

I'm not sure what you're trying to help me out with, i don't believe my rolling blocks have a problem.  I don't even bother to bush the firing pin small, that's not a particular problem area for a rb.  Why would you drill a hole into the firing cavity of a gun?  I guess I would have to know what the firing cavity is also, as I'm not even sure what that is.  In any case, I can't see how drilling holes in a rolling block is going to improve it, it's about as good as it can get with it's design now.

My rifle doesn't stretch brass, as it is tight breeched to the rim, so as long as i stay below the pressure limits of the action and keep the inside of the cases clean, no problems there.  I had some problems in the past with buffalo arms stretched brass being pulled too thin, that has been fixed with starline brass.

The weak spot on a rolling block isn't the barrel diameter.  You're right, modern steel has fixed that, and the RB has plenty of barrel diameter anyway.  The few blowups I have seen on rolling blocks have been on Swedish and Danish re-heat treated actions, and one #1 that must have had a huge overcharge because it blew the top off the action ring.  The weak spot is the inevitable gap between the breech block and the barrel.  It is a gas leak IF a case problem occurs.  I agree that a rolling block is unlikely to blow up.  It is likely to leak gas into your face if it ruptures a cartridge for any reason.  It is also subject to springing of the breech block with excessive case pressure.  Again, won't blow up the gun, but can cause case rupture and gas leakage.   

I guess the bottom line is if you want to fire smokeless in your rifle, you can.  I'm conservative, and choose not to do so.  My recommendation is that if someone wants to use higher pressure loadings, use an action that can handle them better if something goes wrong.  Each person can evaluate the risk level they are comfortable with, and decide what to do individually.    

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #23 - Oct 18th, 2011 at 8:22pm
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Dave,
The idea of drilling through to the firing pin hole is to vent high pressure gases in case of a blown primer. You would drill to the juncture of the firing pin to the larger firing pin body. The same as gas venting on bolt actions so there is a path that the gases can take that is easier than following the firing pin back to the shooter. If the firing pin is close tolerance then the gases will vent in the path of least resistance, the drilled hole/holes. 

Case heads are aprox. .200 thick, thats why the '03 Springfields will still work with out fully enclosing the case head and it's a weak spot in that rifle and they were made to run pressures of 48,000 CUP and not the lower pressure of the RB. My RB's have a gap of less than .010 and thats in the larger diameter of the rim. If the gases were to escape between the breech block and the barrel, they would vent at 90 deg. to the shooter. I do believe that the barrel and receiver ring would give before the pressure could melt the head and vent between the barrel and breech block.

Frank
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #24 - Oct 19th, 2011 at 11:14am
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ssdave wrote on Oct 18th, 2011 at 10:29am:
Some people have a difference risk tolerance than others.  Joe Westerner chooses to shoot smokeless in anything; I do not.  I don’t ride motorcycles; millions do.  I have an employee with a son in a wheelchair, unable to talk, eat, or help himself.  Motorcycle accident last August.  Acceptable risk to many, not to me.


Dave, I respect your opinion, especially on Rolling Blocks, but comparing risks of motorcycles to reloading smokeless just doesn't make sense. If somebody else on the road does something stupid and you get paralized or die, it's beyond your control. In the case of reloading we have complete control of the process, and no external variables that others can do to change that.
Lost my mother in law to a drunk driver back in 1978, but my wife and I still drive our cars and take our chances. If you had a collision would you stop driving?
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #25 - Oct 19th, 2011 at 12:54pm
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Hi, Val,

Not an apt comparison I made, but the point I was trying to make is different people make different risk decisions, and both sides are "right" within their individual beliefs and risk tolerance versus benefits.  I have other rifles that I can readily shoot smokeless in, so no benefit to shooting in my RB.  Therefore, makes no sense for me to take any risk to do so.  Same with driving.  I buy safe vehicles, avoid times and situations that are risk prone, but drive what I need to.  Motorcycles have no benefit for me, and lots of risk so i avoid.

I have chosen, based on what I know about rolling blocks, to limit my loads to about 35,000 psi in a 7mm cartridge, and about 28,000 in a .45-70.  I have owned a 50 alaskan that I got the owners loading records, and he fired nearly 100 rounds at 55,000 psi according to his quickload stuff, and my powley comps.  That's psi, not c.u.p.  It held together.  That's because everything went right.  When things don't go right, is what I'm choosing to avoid.  An excessive charge, a bad piece of brass, and the gas leakage can damage your eyes.  So, wear safety glasses, and in my case I simplly avoid using smokeless in .45-90 cases.  I use smokeless in the 7mm, but use published load data that limits the pressure to my range.   

The "problem" I see with smokeless loads in big straight wall cases is that the volume is too big, and fast burning charges are needed to work at all because of the large expansion ratio.  I could come near to triple charging a .45-90 using 4198.  It's hard to see a 20% overcharge difference in the case, and the fast burning powders have a very steep pressure/volume curve as you increase volume of powder behind a heavy bullet.  I visually check each case before seating the bullet, and also rely on the fact that I'm going to fire them in a high wall to make me confident enough to use them.  Other people may rely on their care in loading as adequate protection and fire it in any gun. 



  
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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #26 - Oct 20th, 2011 at 11:06am
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I think I fall into that last categorie; "other people may rely on care in loading as adequate protection". I'm always careful with all my reloading, but more so with any of my really old guns.
Regardless of what powder I choose I can't be careful enough when reloading for a really neat old singleshot rifle!
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #27 - Oct 21st, 2011 at 1:36pm
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It would be interesting to know the makeup of steel used in the actions.  Case harden would prevent gouges and such to the surface - but I doubt it would do much to add strength to prevent a lateral rupture.  I think it is the strength of the barrel steel that contains the pressure while the receiver holds the barrel secure against the breech block.  Case harden probably plays a part to limit stretching of the receiver.  The one rolling block failure I have seen pictures of was an intentional blow up - as I remember - the cross bolts for both hammer and block did not shear and remained in one piece while the forward part of the receiver and barrel blew apart.  I say in one piece meaning the cross bolts were intact and looked in good order.  It would be interesting to hear or read what the designers went through when confronted with this new nitro powder back in those days.
  
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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #28 - Nov 3rd, 2011 at 3:59pm
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Ziggy,
Thank you VERY much for your offer analyze the RB metal. We could shortly obtain the answer to this old nagging question. A good friend has donated a black powder RB for metallurgical testing. If you will PM your address to me, I'll send a big piece to you.

Does anyone on the forum have a piece of a 1897, 1902 or a #5 sporting that is ruined and can send a piece of it to Ziggy?

Frank
  

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Re: Pressure of a Remington Rolling Block?
Reply #29 - Nov 7th, 2011 at 8:01am
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My knowledge and experience with rolling blocks is limited to Swedish m/1867 and m/1889 rifles. The m/1889 military rifles are all rebuilt 1867 actions re-case hardened with new forged breechblocks and hammers. They are caliber 8x58R Danish -- smokeless.

There was a great deal of confusion about load levels for 8x58R Danish due to erroneous information published in Cartridges of the World. As well, European C.I.P. pressure data for 8x58RD is way over what would be safe in a m/1889 Swedish rolling block. 3200 BAR = 46,412 psi.

Initially I contacted Norma Precision in Sweden as they have the most experience with 8x58RD in the Swedish rolling block. They once loaded a factory cartridge in this caliber. Subsequently a colleague picked up the ball and did an amazing job of researching "Historical and Experimental Investigations of the Pressure Characteristics of the 8x58 Rimmed Danish Cartridge", (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)
 
The bottom line is Norma of Sweden, in their older loading manuals covering 8x58RD, maxed out at 28,660 psi or 1950 BAR. 

Read the page at the link. It's the result of research of solid technical historical data and first-hand pressure data. 

I now own only two rolling blocks, both Swedish. m/1867 12,7x44R sporter and a nice m/1889 8x58RD sporter. I've had about 30 rolling blocks pass through my hands direct from Sweden. While I like rolling blocks I'm really ready for a High Wall  Wink.

Dutchman
  
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