"I was very happy with it till I got a chronograph and saw the velocities I was getting which was below factory reported levels. The 22" barrel was the problem, and the chamber was sloppy in it."
I had the same problem with my Remington M700 Classic .35 Whelen. However, the problem was not your 22" barrel but Remington itself. When Remington brought out the .35 Whelen in the Classic, they requested that SAAMI state that Maximum Allowable Pressure (MAP) for the .35 Whelen be no greater than that for the 30-06. Loaded to a more proper pressure level the cartridge is a horse of a different color. Remington wanted the pressure to be kept low enough so that they would not be having problems with their pump and semi-auto rifles yet Remington still sells those rifle chambered to the .270 Win. which runs about 10KPSI higher than the 30-06. I haven't heard of any problems with them in the .270. Have you. Has anyone. maybe there are problems and it's just a well guarded secret. FWIW, they did the same thing with the .280 Remington. Loaded to .270 level pressures and there's no need for the .280 AI. Currently. I'm running a 160 gr. Speer Grand Slam at 2910 FPS. That's not a weak load. The same for the .35 Whelen. I run a 225 gr. TSX a little over 2700 FPS and it has the same trajectory as a 180 gr. from the 30-06. Oh my!
I wrote RIFLE magazine about the disparity in velocity between advertised and actual speeds and I got a rather terse letter back written by the now late gun writer Al Miller. Enough said on that.
I reach the load I use in the .35W by working up slowly and with the use of a chronograph. Once I found a load I liked, several times i'd shoot that load reloading the cases and checking closely including the condition of the primer, case head expansion, case stretch and more runs over the chronograph.
Paul B.
I had the same problem with my Remington M700 Classic .35 Whelen. However, the problem was not your 22" barrel but Remington itself. When Remington brought out the .35 Whelen in the Classic, they requested that SAAMI state that Maximum Allowable Pressure (MAP) for the .35 Whelen be no greater than that for the 30-06. Loaded to a more proper pressure level the cartridge is a horse of a different color. Remington wanted the pressure to be kept low enough so that they would not be having problems with their pump and semi-auto rifles yet Remington still sells those rifle chambered to the .270 Win. which runs about 10KPSI higher than the 30-06. I haven't heard of any problems with them in the .270. Have you. Has anyone. maybe there are problems and it's just a well guarded secret. FWIW, they did the same thing with the .280 Remington. Loaded to .270 level pressures and there's no need for the .280 AI. Currently. I'm running a 160 gr. Speer Grand Slam at 2910 FPS. That's not a weak load. The same for the .35 Whelen. I run a 225 gr. TSX a little over 2700 FPS and it has the same trajectory as a 180 gr. from the 30-06. Oh my!
I wrote RIFLE magazine about the disparity in velocity between advertised and actual speeds and I got a rather terse letter back written by the now late gun writer Al Miller. Enough said on that.
I reach the load I use in the .35W by working up slowly and with the use of a chronograph. Once I found a load I liked, several times i'd shoot that load reloading the cases and checking closely including the condition of the primer, case head expansion, case stretch and more runs over the chronograph.
Paul B.