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metallica":3cafd0kp said:Thanks for the link but I am unable to download those things on this computer.......... Im not looking for exact #s im just wondering cause this is the first time i have used a chrony and it was -12C out when I was shooting. Im just wondering if my ft/sec will be faster or slower when it gets warmer out durring the summer cause then I know I have to cut back on my loads cause i am shooting a 180grn AccuBond out of my 300wby at 3500ft/sec
(IMR 7828 84grn, 26" barrel)
It seems to be a little fasdt for my liking but i was thinking maybe it was faster cause it was cold out....??????
thanks
metallica":vufuutmd said:I didnt think that a case lenght increase of .004" (before re-sizing) wasnt too bad..??? All the material Ive read says that you may trim a case up to 4 times and up to .060" Is what im reading wrong?? please let me know, thanks
my nosler brass came from the factory at 2.810" well away from the max case lenght of 2.825" so i figured that a .004" before re-sizing increase wasnt too bad??? there in the tumbler right now but ill post what they come out as after re-sizing..........
Thanks guys, i thought it was a little fast. The nosler reloading book shows a max of 84.5 grn for IMR 7828......... And there was anouther guy at t5he range with anouther chroney that i shot through and it was the same just under 3500........ and both chronies were about 20' away from the bench........ I know its a little hot
Dubyam, Hodgdon's 2004 manual talks about 2 methods of measuring expansion: 1. at the expansion ring (just ahead of the belt on belted mag's) and 2. at the "web"(just ahead of the extractor groove as outlined in Hornady Handbook of Cartridge Reloading). Both methods compare expansion of new unfired brass with fired brass just measuring at different locations. I used the expansion ring method for some 7mm rem mag loads using Nosler brass and came up with about 0.0043" avg. expansion (factory load was 0.0055 for comparison). Using the web method, one would expect much smaller expansion figures (and requires a blade micrometer to fit into the area measured). For that method, Hornady found that for low-pressure cartridges (e.g., 30-30) expansion should be 0.0003 to 0.0004, mid-pressure cartridges (e.g., .22-250 or 30.06) should be 0.0005 to 0.0006, and belted mags should not expand more than 0.0006 to 0.0007"dubyam":3nf1lv0d said:If you're new virgin brass is expanding .004", I think that may be a lot. I was under the impression that unfired brass shouldn't expand more than about .0001" and once fired brass should expand less than that by a factor of just over half, for a limit of .0004-.0005". If you're getting .004, you're going to lose an eye or worse at some point soon. I hope it was a mistype on your part and you meant .0004".