OK.... here's what I think.
All those who're tired of Al's thoughts please just turn the page... now
If anything it's MORE important to jam factory stuff. For instance today I was working with a brand new Rem 700 300WSM, sloppy chamber both in length and girth and fireforming groups were terrible. This is to be the basis of a mildly customized hunting rig and I've got two NIB 700's to choose from. I've got two chances to make a factory rifle shootable. Do I luck out? Or do we throw the barrel(s) in the trash and scratch up 550 bucks???
And it wasn't in the budget to do the whole neck-up neck-down thing, I hadda' choose.
Soooo....after three firings of 15 cases while I 'broke in' the barrel I picked thru and found 3 good square ones that were tight fit in the chamber, I have a selection of WSM dies so was able to set up for a scrupulous fit, nice solid feel on the downstroke, and have at it.
The rifle came alive, really. It's a keeper.
I used those three cases to go through a load workup sequence and ended my session with a mini aggregate of really small holes. NOW I'll do what has to be done to make good cases for the rifle.
And here's WHY in my opinion.....
Borden Bumps, bushed actions and oversized bolts...... 90 degree cocking pieces and floating boltheads, even various MIS-alignments all exist as ways to achieve alignment and alleviate random vibrations at the moment of firing.
In a perfect world the cartridge should be centerlined and perpendicular to the boltface when it ka-booms.....the lugs should be firmly seated.
The typical factory rig is the exact OPPOSITE of this. The round is flopping loose, the barrel doesn't line up with the chamber doesn't line up with the action bore CERTAINLY isn't perpendicular to the boltface and therefore every firing event is it's own separate cataclysm. Cataclysmic events aren't repeatable. They're random. It's a known fact that the only safe place to ride the lightnin' is in the middle, and to stay in the middle you need REPEATABLE events .......
So tighten it up, bury those lugs......do what it takes to BURY them and keep them buried through the use of good sizing technique. Keep the lugs seated and most rifles will settle down.
It works.
Well, it works for me and Caffee at least
opinionsby
al