Mikecr
Well-Known Member
Bolt thrust is higher.What does one do if they already have one of the largest cases on the market?
Keep the chamber free of oil, and be sure that your bolt head is for magnums (heavy duty lugs).
Bolt thrust is higher.What does one do if they already have one of the largest cases on the market?
Bolt thrust is higher.
Keep the chamber free of oil, and be sure that your bolt head is for magnums (heavy duty lugs).
Standard (eg 30-06) Savage bolt lugs are 0.442". Magnum is 0.500". Ultra magnum (WSM, RUM, Nosler, etc.) is 0.550".I have know idea about the differences of action bolts to cartridges.
Bolt thrust and SAAMI max pressures are proofed higher with magnums. A double whammy. So personally, I would like assurance that my bolt lugs would not be flexing a lot at max loads.
But it could very well be that all bolts are strong enough, I don't know.
The factory company I would trust to follow is Savage. Whatever they do, it's right.
I did have a WSM savage action once, and it had a larger tenon than a 223 action. I would be surprised if the bolt head was the same thickness as a 223 bolt head. Just didn't notice at the time & it was stolen before my use..
Older post but a very interesting one.Standard (eg 30-06) Savage bolt lugs are 0.442". Magnum is 0.500". Ultra magnum (WSM, RUM, Nosler, etc.) is 0.550".
I'm pretty sure Savage .223 bolt heads use the same lug length as standard, but not positive.
They are. SAAMI lists proof load PSI.Chamber pressure for sticky bolt lift should be different for different cartridge case
Haha me too. Chemical plant?Yeah. I used to work in hydrocarbon processing and I do tend to over-think pressure and what it can do.
Mostly oil and gas. Worked in one field that had shut-in wellhead pressures near 10,000 psi. Worked in another that had gas re-injection compression to 5000 psi.Haha me too. Chemical plant?
I sure everyone else has chimed in already but sticky bolt lift for me had always happened after I had ejector swipes. So to me sticky bolt lift is way over pressure. I've ran a gun with very very light ejection swipes and it was just slightly over max book charge. I don't do these things anymore. You load can change so fast with temp it's just not reliable. I found the most reliable, accurate charges around it at 75% to 90% of book max. Maybe even lower and about high as 95% book max. There definitely a given sweet spot for every rifle and brass combo. I used to run my 300 RUM maxed out with a 220 ELDX on some RL26. It shot good till I hit about 65 degrees. Now I'm looking at a much milder load that will still have some HP but nothing that recking the brass after a few reloads.