Recently picked up a T3X CTR chambered in 260 Remington.
I loaded up a couple handloads for the rifles first outing, I used some recipes that have been praised online. Without getting overly complicated, I loaded my rounds to 2.80" COAL.
Despite several people having loads as long as 2.865" for this particular rifle, I know better than to go in at the max of anything.
The rifles first outing went well, with several loads resulting in sub 1/2" groups at 100 yards.
This week I planned to really start working up some loads (particularly with the ever praised Lapua 123gr Scenar).
My modified 260 Rem case came in the mail today, threw it on the Hornady "Lock 'n load" case overall length measuring tool...
The results? The same loads I loaded at 2.80", read that they make contact with the rifling at 2.69" and 2.76" COAL. What!?
I've never had a rifle that the bullets make contact with the rifling before they are longer than what can fit in the magazine (In this case, 2.90" is about the max you can fit in the mag, some say closer to 2.85").
So whats the deal, say you? The most accurate loads I experienced were the ones jammed 0.11" into the lands. I experienced zero over pressure signs surprisingly, although they were modest loads to begin with. All loads chambered and extracted easily. I would think if I was jamming something 0.11" into the lands I would at least notice when chambering the round.
Is there something screwy going on here? I checked and rechecked multiple times and got the same results. I compared the modified case to my fire formed cases, I tried with a handful of different bullets, all resulted in a COAL reading of well under what I would have expected.
Am I missing something here??
I'm going to keep messing with it, I'm just not willing to accept this result. Going to go seat some bullets now to see if chambering them results in shortening their COAL.
I loaded up a couple handloads for the rifles first outing, I used some recipes that have been praised online. Without getting overly complicated, I loaded my rounds to 2.80" COAL.
Despite several people having loads as long as 2.865" for this particular rifle, I know better than to go in at the max of anything.
The rifles first outing went well, with several loads resulting in sub 1/2" groups at 100 yards.
This week I planned to really start working up some loads (particularly with the ever praised Lapua 123gr Scenar).
My modified 260 Rem case came in the mail today, threw it on the Hornady "Lock 'n load" case overall length measuring tool...
The results? The same loads I loaded at 2.80", read that they make contact with the rifling at 2.69" and 2.76" COAL. What!?
I've never had a rifle that the bullets make contact with the rifling before they are longer than what can fit in the magazine (In this case, 2.90" is about the max you can fit in the mag, some say closer to 2.85").
So whats the deal, say you? The most accurate loads I experienced were the ones jammed 0.11" into the lands. I experienced zero over pressure signs surprisingly, although they were modest loads to begin with. All loads chambered and extracted easily. I would think if I was jamming something 0.11" into the lands I would at least notice when chambering the round.
Is there something screwy going on here? I checked and rechecked multiple times and got the same results. I compared the modified case to my fire formed cases, I tried with a handful of different bullets, all resulted in a COAL reading of well under what I would have expected.
Am I missing something here??
I'm going to keep messing with it, I'm just not willing to accept this result. Going to go seat some bullets now to see if chambering them results in shortening their COAL.