Dave Tooley
Active member
Here's my take on things. BR bullets are subject less trauma than larger caliber heavier bullets. Think about jacket thickness and bearing surface length. Launch pressures are about the same regardless of cartridge capacity or bullet weight. BR bullets have thin skin and a short bearing surface that should be good but everything is a compromise. BR FB bullets all have a pressure ring and that's the part of the bullet that has to be addressed. Large caliber heavy BT bullets have thicker jackets. I think giving that pressure ring a little room can't hurt a thing over the life of the barrel. It takes a great deal more force to push heavy thick jacketed bullets into the rifling. One time I was having problems blowing up some custom 6.5 bullets. I cut a few dummy chambers and threaded them to fit a loading press. Made a punch and starting squirting bullets down barrels. I did it with 6 and 6.5's. Not sure what I learned other than it takes a hell of a lot pressure to push a bullet into the rifling. It is widely believed that a tight freebore is the best for accuracy. I'm not so sure. I have changed the reamer angle at the end of the neck from 45 to 30 degrees on some reamers per customers request. It doesn't hurt. I've tapered freebores for years and hundreds of barrels mostly larger calibers and I believe it has definitely helped accuracy and has contributed to consistent accuracy over the life of the barrel.
George
I guess it would be defined either freebore or leade angle by the diameter. By that I mean if you spec'd .2443" down to .2435" it would still be larger than groove diameter and that would be freebore. If you went .2443" to .2428" that would be a leade angle. I have always been suspect of the freebore just abruptly ending at a diameter something larger than the groove diameter. That transition can't be good on FB bullets with pressure rings. I know with a dull reamer it becomes a choke point.
Now the 64 trillion dollar question. How do you grind it in a very short freebore and then how do you confirm that's what you ordered? I've have it done on longer freebores without issue. Look up the SAAMI specs on a 300 Win Mag for a clue.
http://www.saami.org/PubResources/CC_Drawings/Rifle/300 Winchester Magnum.pdf
Dave
George
I guess it would be defined either freebore or leade angle by the diameter. By that I mean if you spec'd .2443" down to .2435" it would still be larger than groove diameter and that would be freebore. If you went .2443" to .2428" that would be a leade angle. I have always been suspect of the freebore just abruptly ending at a diameter something larger than the groove diameter. That transition can't be good on FB bullets with pressure rings. I know with a dull reamer it becomes a choke point.
Now the 64 trillion dollar question. How do you grind it in a very short freebore and then how do you confirm that's what you ordered? I've have it done on longer freebores without issue. Look up the SAAMI specs on a 300 Win Mag for a clue.
http://www.saami.org/PubResources/CC_Drawings/Rifle/300 Winchester Magnum.pdf
Dave