squaring heads

One guy that useta' post about it here on BRC was the late Skip Otto a BR Icon. Skip recognized that it was an important part of the vibration/accuracy equation and he'd turn his on the lathe.

I believe in fire-forming them square instead.
 
One guy that useta' post about it here on BRC was the late Skip Otto a BR Icon. Skip recognized that it was an important part of the vibration/accuracy equation and he'd turn his on the lathe.

I believe in fire-forming them square instead.

I've done both ways - I'm with Al - 55-60K PSI squares 'em pretty well.:eek:RG
 
No, don't do it.

Squaring case heads with a lathe or wilson case trimmer is not only unnecessary but if overdone can even be detrimental or in an extreme case could even be dangerous by weakening the solid case head.

I'll admit to being one who has tried it in my younger days but after thirty years of trying to separate the fly poop from the pepper, I no longer waste the time. During my early years of BR group shooting, I placed great emphasis on keeping everything neat, clean, polished etc. Now I do only what I know from experience makes a difference; no more. Life's too short.

If you bisect a Lapua 220 Russian case, you find that the solid head is .160 deep. The bolt face on most actions is .150 deep and you need a minimum of .005 clearance from the bolt nose to the coned breech. If you sketch it out and add it up you find there is only .005 of the solid head that's up into and supported by the chamber. This puts you right at the border line of having unsupported case hanging out of the chamber. Turn off .004 to .005 squaring the case heads in a lathe and you reduce this to zero.

Consider also that if you remove .002 or .003 from the case head that reduces the depth of the primer pocket by the same amount. But of course you can correct this by running the primer pocket tool in again but why bother when you can simply skip all this time consuming stuff and enjoy more shooting time instead of case prepping.

For what it's worth.

Just ol' Gene Beggs blowin' smoke again.

Best regards to all and good shootin'!
 
Squaring case heads with a lathe or wilson case trimmer is not only unnecessary but if overdone can even be detrimental or in an extreme case could even be dangerous by weakening the solid case head.

I'll admit to being one who has tried it in my younger days but after thirty years of trying to separate the fly poop from the pepper, I no longer waste the time. During my early years of BR group shooting, I placed great emphasis on keeping everything neat, clean, polished etc. Now I do only what I know from experience makes a difference; no more. Life's too short.

If you bisect a Lapua 220 Russian case, you find that the solid head is .160 deep. The bolt face on most actions is .150 deep and you need a minimum of .005 clearance from the bolt nose to the coned breech. If you sketch it out and add it up you find there is only .005 of the solid head that's up into and supported by the chamber. This puts you right at the border line of having unsupported case hanging out of the chamber. Turn off .004 to .005 squaring the case heads in a lathe and you reduce this to zero.

Consider also that if you remove .002 or .003 from the case head that reduces the depth of the primer pocket by the same amount. But of course you can correct this by running the primer pocket tool in again but why bother when you can simply skip all this time consuming stuff and enjoy more shooting time instead of case prepping.

For what it's worth.

Just ol' Gene Beggs blowin' smoke again.

Best regards to all and good shootin'!

Hey old Fat Albert pilot...hows tricks?

(Fat Albert=Boeing 737.)


/
 
DITTO all of this.

Squaring case heads with a lathe or wilson case trimmer is not only unnecessary but if overdone can even be detrimental or in an extreme case could even be dangerous by weakening the solid case head.

I'll admit to being one who has tried it in my younger days but after thirty years of trying to separate the fly poop from the pepper, I no longer waste the time. During my early years of BR group shooting, I placed great emphasis on keeping everything neat, clean, polished etc. Now I do only what I know from experience makes a difference; no more. Life's too short.

If you bisect a Lapua 220 Russian case, you find that the solid head is .160 deep. The bolt face on most actions is .150 deep and you need a minimum of .005 clearance from the bolt nose to the coned breech. If you sketch it out and add it up you find there is only .005 of the solid head that's up into and supported by the chamber. This puts you right at the border line of having unsupported case hanging out of the chamber. Turn off .004 to .005 squaring the case heads in a lathe and you reduce this to zero.



Consider also that if you remove .002 or .003 from the case head that reduces the depth of the primer pocket by the same amount. But of course you can correct this by running the primer pocket tool in again but why bother when you can simply skip all this time consuming stuff and enjoy more shooting time instead of case prepping.

For what it's worth.

Just ol' Gene Beggs blowin' smoke again.

Best regards to all and good shootin'!

Especially the the bold! ;) RG
 
does any one do any thing to the heads of the 6 mm br or the 6mm ppc?
gary

Been there, done that, but for a different reason.

Back in the mid '2000's, Lapua produced a run of cases that had a convex face. I discovered it because after continued firings, (in the upper load window), primer pockets started getting so tight that you would crush primers trying to get them in. A weird phenomenon no doubt.

I made a fixture to face the Heads flat on a 220 Russian Case and the problem disappeared.

We obviously don't have that problem now.

As far as accuracy is concerned, Randy is correct. 50,000 psi does a good job of squaring things up.
 
Hey all you old guys stop telling these young guys what not to do. Let'em consume vast amounts of time piddling over nothing. If they're hunkered down messing with brass they won't be on the range practicing.
 
Do the reverse

Been there, done that, but for a different reason.

Back in the mid '2000's, Lapua produced a run of cases that had a convex face. I discovered it because after continued firings, (in the upper load window), primer pockets started getting so tight that you would crush primers trying to get them in. A weird phenomenon no doubt.

I made a fixture to face the Heads flat on a 220 Russian Case and the problem disappeared.

We obviously don't have that problem now.

As far as accuracy is concerned, Randy is correct. 50,000 psi does a good job of squaring things up.

Jackie,

Now if you can put the proper amount of convex back into the case head, your loose primer problem with the new softer brass will disappear.

Michael
 
I have a know it all young engineer here at work, who is weighing powder to .01gr, but is then loading it into untouched Lake City factory primed brass. He wonders why he isn't getting any good groups.
 
ppc

thank you for the reply .i know now that i am chaseing my tail.but not shooting a lot of br and asking ? i find is the only way to get a good answer from all of you br people.
gary
 
.....

If you bisect a Lapua 220 Russian case, you find that the solid head is .160 deep. The bolt face on most actions is .150 deep and you need a minimum of .005 clearance from the bolt nose to the coned breech. If you sketch it out and add it up you find there is only .005 of the solid head that's up into and supported by the chamber. This puts you right at the border line of having unsupported case hanging out of the chamber. Turn off .004 to .005 squaring the case heads in a lathe and you reduce this to zero.
...
Just ol' Gene Beggs blowin' smoke again.

Best regards to all and good shootin'!

That's so on a Remington and was why back in the 80's when Bob Brackney wrote his article about bushing the bolt face for a PPC and installing a Sako extractor in Rifle magazine that he recommended cutting back the bolt nose for a .125" deep bolt face and then setting up the bolt nose to barrel recess clearance to .001". Of course, that was when we were using the balloon head Sako .220 Russian brass. All the custom benchrest actions followed suit and have .125 deep bolt faces as well. So, with the current custom actions, you have a lot more case head in the barrel than you would if you were using a standard Remington bolt. We can stand a little more clearance from the bolt nose to the barrel cone now just because we no longer are shooting the balloon head .220 Russian brass.
 
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