g n brezinski
Member
can any one tell me what this is and where I can find what the case looks like as copareted to a 6 ppc or the 6 br?
gary b
gary b
Gentelmen.
The original 6 Talldog was 0.80 short.
Mr. Stekl shot a .100 short case very vell.
I have used a .125 short case (Lapua).
Shoots every bit as well as 6PPC,same barrel.
All the best from
Reykjavik, Iceland
Magnus Sigurdsson
I think you meant the original was 0.080" shorter.
-Lee
Dear Mr. Lee!
A typo, I am not the greatest typist in the world!!!!
Thank you Sir for the correction!
Sincerely yours,
Magnus Sigurdsson
Reykjavik
Iceland
Who dreamed up the Talldog ?
Hal
I thought it might be Dan Dowling, but I wasn't sure.
Dear Mr. Hal.
No it was not Mr. Dowling, he is the brain behind the .22 Waldog and the Dasher case.
6 Talldog is the brainchild of Fred Hasecuster.
All the best to you and yours,
Magnus Sigurdsson
Reykjavik
Iceland
I sure do wish I could visit the land of fire and ice. Since I was a kid it was on my list of places to see.
I thought it might be Dan Dowling, but I wasn't sure.
Hal
.... and I talked with him at length about how it came about. He was one of the primary developers of this cartridge due to Sako discontinuing the .220 Russian brass (and before Lapua began manufacturing it).
Fred (gunsmithing) and Perry Morton (shooting) worked on the Talldog and started with a full length BR case (at that time it was Remington 7 BR) and kept shortening it until it shot like a 6PPC in the Sako .220 Russian brass. They tested it by basically shooting many groups at each length. Keep in mind that this meant not only shortening the case, but also shortening the dies and moving the barrel shoulder and cone back to match the case. Fred said he and Perry went though a lot of barrels and shot "tons" of groups. Also keep in mind that N133 wasn't out yet and the primary BR powders at that time were T-32, Norma 201, and 322 (mostly Scottish). Not coincidentally, the case capacity that seemed to work out the best was that same as the old Sako .220 Russian. That ended up being .085 short for the BR case. The Sako .220 body at the rim is about .440 while the BR case is about .470, thus the difference in case capacities
Joe, You might have asked Fred where or who was using before he did. Gerald Forys was shortening to match powder burn rates when Fred Talked with him about it at the old St. Louis range. It did start with the brass shortages of years ago Gerald just played with length to match which ever powder was around at the time. fwiw
... and you have certainly lived through a lot of this first hand.
It shouldn't be surprising how so many of the earlier shooters/experimenters have worked all of the variables that can be worked to get the best accuracy. What impresses me is how much actual machine work it takes to try out the theories before even one shot is fired.
I had the honor (and one might say sad task) of going through the shop of one of our great Michigan shooter/experimenters Phil Sauer after he passed away a few years ago. Phil had great equipment and quite a shop to go with it.
One of the things that Phil experimented with in the 6PPC was a no-leade chamber that had the reamer run in an additional .027". And Phil shot 6mm bullets that were made on .750 jackets; and was a relatively high ogive - giving very little bearing surface. (Most of you may know that the typically 6PPC bullet is made on a jacket that is somewhere between .790 and .825 and shot in a 13 to 15 twist barrel - mostly somewhere around 14 is typical). The neck on his "6PPC-plus" basically had just enough length to hold the bullet in it and still be considered a "loaded round". Word was that these bullets approached 3,600 fps at the muzzle.
Phil was big on more velocity. When I was more of a neophyte than I am today, I once walked past him loading 133 into a PPC case and I remember seeing powder grains heaping over the top of the case mouth. I asked Phil if he had enough powder in there. His only comment was "I'd put more in there if I could".
Needless to say, don't try this at home and work up to these loads safely.