@ Phil
I have heard from a reliable source (a noted gunsmith other than Dwight Scott) that Scott & a few others increased the weight of BAT firing pins, and got better groups. Sample size greater than 1.
@ Tony
Your report parallels that of Joel Kendrick, who has been shooting a 6x47 reformed from .308 cases (LR primer) for a number of years, with considerable success. He tried the SR Lapua, and went back to his cases formed from LR .308.
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One of the reasons I started this thread was we get all kinds of reports.Most are of the "this happened to me" variety. What the doctors call anecdotal. A few are theoretical -- the model predicts such and such. But many of the so-called theoretical conclusions are really anecdotal, where somebody mistook one or two tries for exhaustive testing, such as how many people view Palmisano and Pindell testing of small primers and small flash holes. Best I remember, their testing as limited to the .220 Russian, the .222, and the 7.62 x39 (think of this as the LR twin of the .220 Russian). While their results were no doubt accurate, you can't extend them to other chamberings without further testing.
That is the problem with empirical results. You need a coherent model to extend beyond "Well, in MY rifle . . ."
Which is why I wanted to ask Al what made him think the cases with small primers would come to dominate long-range benchrest. Because there was more support for the hole in the case head? Because we don't have "weak" enough large primers? Now I thought it likely Al was just extending urban myth, but Al also does a lt of serious testing, and when he says something, it pays to listen.
We need more information from all parties on WHY. And that will require testing, I think. But experience and speculation are necessary precursors to testing.
For example. If it is the support of the primer hole by a lot of hard brass, is there any way to work-harden the case head before that first crucial firing. Shot peening maybe? Something? If so, a lot of brass with very good dimensional quality control suddenly becomes useful in the high-pressure world of benchrest.
If not simply hardness, is the amount of brass supporting the hole also crucial? Can it compensate for a lack of hardness? We can find cases where there is more brass around the case head than a PPC with a SR primer pocket. We may have to go to "fat" cases, or rimmed cases. I, for one, don't want to do that work unless it really matters, but if it does, so be it.
The size and shape of the flash hole? Does a smaller hole reduce the pressure in the primer pocket? Al thinks so, is he right?
Moving from pure mechanical support of the case head, are the diameter, shape, and length of the flash hole factors in good ignition? Palmisano thought so. Remember the long-range case he drew up? Never made, to my knowledge, but with a two-piece case, someone could test it (and have steel heads, to boot). Worth all the work?
With "hard" and "weak" primers, can you "swap" a weak LR for a "strong" SR? -- the CCI BR primers seem quite "weak" to me. Is a LR CCI BR as weak as a CCI 450? I dunno. Anybody?
For all you who don't \want to go there, fine. But Ignition is important stuff. If all you want to debate is the relative merits of this chambering, this gunsmith, this brand of action, this brand of barrel, this type of bullets, whatever, have at it. It bores me, because I believe the most important answers aren't there.
Consider this. Suppose we are stuck with lead bullets. Can any breach loader shoot with a muzzle loader? Not likely. Now, as far as pure rifle performance is concerned, we are left with the essentials: Barrels, bullets, powder and ignition.
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My anecdotal story. I got a new barrel for a HG. Chambered with the same reamer. Powder out of the same jug. Same bullets, down to lot number. That barrel shot better with 215Ms than the 210Ms I have been using. Another new barrel. Everything still the same. Now the 210s again shot better. Why? Was the new barrel "tight," maybe? I dunno.