David, Sorry it took this long to get back. I had to go check my reamers for specs, find my targets and check my chrono book. Neck and throat reamers as follows, .308 groove, .330 neck dia, ball seat (free bore) .309 x .120 lg, .8 deg leade. .321 groove, .343 neck, .322 x .100 ball seat, 1.0 deg leade. .338 groove, .360 neck, .339 x .100 ball seat, 1.0 deg leade. All the .308 stuff is 32/35 Stevens chamber. 2.2cc case capacity. All the fixed loads are around 2000 fps with the exception of one group shot with a 3118 mold that I made into a spitzer, shot with 12 gr 4227 3 BSed and 2 fixed shots. As I was using the fixed in CBA, all are GCed bullets. CBA's rules (at least into the 90's) allow you to seat the bullet only finger tight so, that it will not fall out if turned upside down and that is the reason for the tight neck chamber. I didn't size the necks, just re/decap, throw the charge at the bench as in BSing, put a bullet in the neck, long and chamber. The targets I'm showing are with three bullets, 3118S (one group), RCBS 180 FN that I made into a Spitzer and a NEI copy of a 311334 that weights 200 gr. All shot at 100 yds. My bore dia is .300 on the Douglas barrel and I sized the bore riding nose to .301 in a coax sizer with the body sized .309 for the ball seat and the base band .310. I also shoot this same chamber BSed with a tapered RL 187 gr bullet with a .311 - .312 base band. The advantage there is that you only need palm pressure to BS. It makes it much faster and less cumbersome to BS that way. I never chambered a barrel with the 33 cal reamer. I rethroated my Clerke HW with the 32 but, can't shoot it fixed because it has a straight taper Schuetzen type chamber (no neck) but, it made it possible to BS like I do the 30 cal and that rifle has won it's share of matches (Ken, it the rifle I bought from you in '85). All my 30 & 32 BSing is done with RL tapered bullets sized .001 - .002 over the ball seat size. Continued
|