I used the word headspace last time , rather then oal

Bytesniffer

New member
Previous question I asked
I was wondering how to
Determine overall length.
I stated wrongly headspace ,
Although I was interested in
Headspace, I did want oal.
So, I stated just putting in a dummy
Round closing the bolt
And let the lands push the
Bullet into the Case.
Then adjust the bullet
By several thousands
Smaller. Seems OK

Or use the hornady
Gauges and get 10
Readings of an
Average of 2.250 from ogive
Take three thousandths off to have
2.247
Just don't know how to
Translate this into oal. ?
Just seat bullet in die until same
Reading ?
 
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Determinating distance of base to lands
( is NOT OAL )( OAL is base to tip of bullet )

Many have done the job the first way you mentioned

But the tools are available for the second way
and I feel the tools will give you a more accurate
measurement

I am not shure what you are asking on your last question

This answer is my best guess
A competition Seating Die will make it easier to produce
cartages to a specific length
Whether it is OAL
or
Base to oglive length (for a certain distance to the lands)

First you seat the bullet too long, measure, then adjust your
die, seat the bullet again, measure, repeat as necessary
until you get the bullet seated to the length you want
 
Just don't know how to translate this into oal. ?

Add the word 'maximum' to OAL. That would give you Maximum Overall Length. I know, you are wondering where the 'a' went. It would help if you added 'c' to overall length. That would give you COL, and when sticking the bullet into the lands when the length of the magazine is a consideration you can add Maximum to overall length.

F. Guffey
 
The 'c' stands for case. I know it is a bit confusing but I have one reloading manual that goes back and forth with OAL and COL. Overall is like 'included'. And then there are those that are wondering; including what? The overall includes the case and bullet. And we do not want to forget the case has a 3 lengths. One of the lengths included the other two lengths.

F. Guffey
 
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I've always heard and seen, with one exception, case length called "case length".
I've always heard and seen, with one exception, COL means "cartridge overall length", as in the length over all of the components of the cartridge. Synonymous with OAL.
I will continue to use those terms as such.
ymmv
 
When it comes to terminology things can sometimes get confusing. Our friends at SAAMI (Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute incorporated) have compiled a useful glossary of related terms. If you look at the linked page under Information and Specifications you will see "Glossary" listed. Using the SAAMI defined terms can make sure we are all on the same channel when we want to express ourselves with a question. For example:

Bullet Jump: The distance that a bullet must travel from its position at rest in the cartridge case to its initial engagement of the rifling.

Free Bore: A cylindrical length of bore in a firearm just forward of the chamber in which rifling is not present. Associated with bullet jump.

Headspace: The distance from the face of the closed breech of a firearm to the surface in the chamber on which the cartridge case seats.

Cartridge Case Length: The dimensions from face of the head to the mouth.

Working from the glossary affords the community a standardization of the terms we use. So if we use the SAAMI terminology we know we are all on the same channel. :)

Ron
 
I suggest you think of COL/OAL as a check measurement. It is specific to the bullet you are using in your gun. Bullets themselves can vary greatly in OAL depending on the style & condition of the tip.

COL is often important when dealing with magazine fed guns & straight wall cases. Obviously the cartridges need to feed properly from magazines regardless of bullet-jump. In smaller, straight-wall cases, seating depth has a more pronounced effect on pressure so be cautious in reducing recommended OAL.
 
I can very easily and safely
Just duplicate the 7.62x51
Ammo I bought and fire in
My rifle. Out of the box
Unfired the 7.62 reads
Case length 2.007/8
Overall length 2.775
Headspace 1.620

So I measure my chamber
To be more precise then
Factory ammo that is designed
To fit any rifle I guess.

Then I make these measurements
And they seem to be way out
Of spec.
I have to adjust them to fit
Saami specs ?
This should be easy solution for
Experienced reloaders.
 

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I can very easily and safely
Just duplicate the 7.62x51
Ammo I bought and fire in
My rifle. Out of the box
Unfired the 7.62 reads
Case length 2.007/8
Overall length 2.775
Headspace 1.620

Exactly how are you getting the 1.620" measurement you refer to as "headspace"? I have a variety of .308 Winchester and 7.62 X 51 ammunition sitting here and it always comes in right around 1.630" meeting the SAAMI specification for the cartridge. That would be 1.634" -0.007" making the cartridge range 1.627" to 1.634" as measured case head to the datum on the shoulder. The drawing is in the link.

If you are using the Hornady L-N-L headspace gauge to take these measurements you are not doing it in accordance with the Hornady directions and that gauge will not accurately do the measurement you are trying to do.

Here is an example:
CG1.png


The gauge is zeroed with the D-400 collet (the 0.400" collet). I insert a brand new Federal Gold Medal Match .308 Winchester cartridge with a Sierra 168 grain HPBT bullet, not that bullet matters.

CG2.png


The caliper reads 1.623" and I can tell you that is a BS number, all it is would be a reference. The intent of this gauge is not to measure accurately and give an accurate measurement of the case head to datum on the shoulder. Here is the same gauge measuring an actual Headspace Gauge that is a known 1.630".

CG4.png


Note that the gauge reads 1.624" and not the actual 1.630" that the actual headspace gauge is. The Hornady gauge was designed and made to be used for comparison purposes, it was never intended to give actual dimensional numbers. This is why your numbers are always low and below SAAMI specifications, just like the gauge I have pictured.

Why? The reason is because the D-400 collet is not a true 0.400". If you look very close at the hole the shoulder enters there is a slight, very slight radius. Thus the case shoulder rest on that radius and not a sharp 0.400" corner break.

Ron
 
Ron,
I'm getting that reading
By taking the factory 7.62
Round out of the box and placing
In the very gauge that you and I
Have . this is the reading I get.

I don't don't know the answer
That's way I ask questions.

I do know , that if I take a round
That reads 1.625 it is a little
Tight tight in my chamber
As I close bolt.
If I take cartridge sized to
1.623 or lower it chambers
Very smooth.

Anything that reads above 1.625
I can not chamber in my
Rifle
1.623 or below is great

I pull the heads off the factory
7.62x51 ammo that I have no
Issues firing
I measure the length of case

I measure headspace
I measure the length to tip of bullet
As stated previously.
If I'm not following the directions correctly
I missed something,but I do know
What chambers in my rifle and
What doesn't as a guide
 
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On new ammo 0.007 shorter than SAAMI minimum is normal
( your number of 1.620 )

But I make the shoulder 2 to 3 thou. shorter than the chamber
I am loading for
better accuracy, longer case life
(It works the brass less )

If you have more than 1- 308 you probably need to size the cases
to fit all your 308 guns

It is not necessary to make your ammo to SAAMI specs.
It would be nice if you can but not nessary
If not just be aware it is different and may not fit all guns

( I have 5 rifles in 308, all the chambers are between 1 thou. bigger
to 1/4 thou. smaller than SAAMI "0" so when I move the shoulder
2 to 3 thou. smaller these cases will fit all my 308s )
 
Unless your bullet's ogive has the same profile as the factory bullet's ogive, you won't be able to duplicate the factory ammo in both head-to-ogive and COL/OAL dimensions. You can duplicate one dimension, but not both.
 
The only reason I reference
7.62x51 is because my rifle
Says 7.62 on the barrel
And I bought 7.62x51 spec
Ammo
I know its dimension are almost
Exact and internal dimensions
Are little different.

Only fired this ammo 7.62 from
My rifle all measurements are
From one rifle and 7.62 ammo

I can copy the 7.62 ammo and
Reload all day long with no issues.
But I'm trying to understand to produce
More specific ammo to my rifle and its a little confusing.
 
The idea behind the gauge is for a comparison. You for example fire a round, now measure that round. You get a number. Now you start to resize the case. The idea is to adjust your resizing die to get your case, for example, 0.002" smaller than where you started. You are comparing the fired case to the resized fired case. Typically looking to reduce the case by 0.002". The numbers you get with the gauge are just a reference and used for a comparison. When I place an actual known headspace gauge in my Hornady gauge you see what it reads. That number doesn't mean anything.

If we read the directions for use they explain what the gauge is and how it gets used. The gauge is used as a comparator. At no point does Hornady mention the numbers you see are actual true dimensions. You are taking note of a change in a cartridge dimension. That is all we are doing.

Ron
 
So, in studying and studying
The idea of precision loading
I wish someone would have
Suggested that buying this
Hornady stuff.
Oal gauge , bullet and competitor
Was providing me with inaccurate information concerning loading
Close to the lands.
The hornady cartridge wasn't
Fired in my rifle. Its not fit to my
Chamber.
A case fired in my rifle
Is much more accurate
For determining the bullet
Jump to my lands then
The hornady stuff.
Sorry I bought all this junk.
A hole drilled in a case fired
From my rifle and a cleaning
Rod to push the bullet to the
Lands from my neck sized
Case to keep bullet in place
Is superior to the hornady
Stuff.
Hornady just sells little
Bits of stuff to make more
Money.
You don't need it and its not
As accurate.
 
Bytesniffer --

I value your opinion of the Hornady equipment and will pass it on to others
I had no idea it was that inaccurate
I use the RCBS PRECISION MIC. and was not familiar with the Hornady gauges
The RCBS bullet/land gauge is a PIA to use but is accurate, as are the other
gauges in the set
 
Learning curve at work. Next time ask before buying. Many of these things have come about in the last maybe 25 years with the exception of a few like Wilson Case Gauges. I began reloading / hand loading when I came home from Vietnam in 1972. Myself and those before me managed to make perfectly good and accurate ammunition less all the presently marketed "tools".

Don't misunderstand me, many of the tools out there are nice to have but certainly not necessary to make good reliable ammunition.

One does need a good understanding of what happens when we chamber a round and squeeze the trigger. When you want to start loading accurate ammunition it becomes important to understand cartridge and chamber drawings and dimensional data.

Personally unless you are working with a match chamber and match quality ammunition the whole distance off the lands thing is over rated in my opinion. Unless you have already checked concentricity does distance to lands matter? With variations in bullets out of the same box does it matter? Building really good high power ammunition involves a good number of important things over bullet jump. That just being my opinion. The Hornady gauge does what it is advertised to do. That is all it does.

Firewrench044, I have to strongly agree as I prefer the RCBS Precision Mic set and have found my .308 set to be dead accurate to within 0.001 and about the same for my .223 set.

Ron
 
OP,you seem to be learning a whole lot really fast. Well done!!

You are working with length relationships.Cartridge case to chamber,which goes into the headspace(actually applies to the rifle) and the ammo's fit to the rifles headspace.You seem to understand measuring that.You want enough head clearance for your rifle to easily lock up each time.Excessive head clearance causes case stretch.Case stretch shortens brass life.

The benchrest accuracy folks do get particular about seating depth.It can make a difference,but I suggest one more length is important(maybe)

Most(not all) 308 tech will be made to work with a 2.800 magazine box.
So I suggest if you load your ammo to a nominal 2.800 length (It may be 2.785) that things should come together pretty well.There are exceptions....
 
I value your opinion of the Hornady equipment and will pass it on to others
I had no idea it was that inaccurate
I use the RCBS PRECISION MIC. and was not familiar with the Hornady gauges
The RCBS bullet/land gauge is a PIA to use but is accurate, as are the other
gauges in the set

firewrench044, are we starting over? In the big inning I made every effort to make it understood reloaders were infatuated with head space. I insisted manufacturers were taking liberties with changing the name and use of tools. I made it very clear the there was a difference between comparators and gages. The Hornady tool and the Digital tool are labeled 'HEAD SPACE GAGES", but both are comparators. The Wilson case gage has been identified was a case gage since the early 50s.

I mention the Wilson case gage as a case gage because it is a datum based tool, For reloaders that understand the datum find the Wilson case gage a very accurate gage, others find it to be a drop in gage. And then one day it will dawn on someone Wilson gets it correct every time and Hornady has not figured it out after all these years.The hornady cartridge wasn't
Fired in my rifle. Its not fit to my
Chamber.
A case fired in my rifle
Is much more accurate
For determining the bullet
Jump to my lands then
The hornady stuff.
Sorry I bought all this junk.
A hole drilled in a case fired
From my rifle and a cleaning
Rod to push the bullet to the
Lands from my neck sized
Case to keep bullet in place
Is superior to the hornady
Stuff.

And he did all of this all by himself.

F. Guffey
 
firewrench044, are we starting over? In the big inning I made every effort to make it understood reloaders were infatuated with head space.
For those reloaders infatuated with Headspace, the distance from the face of the closed breech of a firearm to the surface in the chamber on which the cartridge case seats. I will be starting a support group. The group will meet here on Tuesday evenings at 20:00 CST. The first step is the admission that you have a problem. Help is available.

Thank You
Ron
 
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