Simo2830
Member
What is the standard common manufacturer's rifle twist for .30-06 and .308 rifles? My recollection is 1:10" or 1:12", but I'm just trying to verify. Thank you.
If you are verifying what you have, try this ...What is the standard common manufacturer's rifle twist for .30-06 and .308 rifles? My recollection is 1:10" or 1:12", but I'm just trying to verify. Thank you.
Remington has used both in the 308. It depends on the model. I have a 308 700 VLS with a 12 and a 700 BDL with a 10. They have made 40X's in both, depending on the model. So, it just depends. Pretty much all 30-06's that I know of are 10's, except a few.What is the standard common manufacturer's rifle twist for .30-06 and .308 rifles? My recollection is 1:10" or 1:12", but I'm just trying to verify. Thank you.
It was 11.25, but we are splitting hairs! Lol!The Army's M24 is 1-11.27, my 700 PSS is 1-12 and my Tikka is 1-11 (all 308s). The Army sniper round M118 is a 175 grain Sierra MK so the light bullet concept is not applicable. That said, most current production 308 rifle are 1-10. The 1-11.27 is interesting, I asked Mike Rock of Rock Creek barrels who at the time worked at Aberdeen Proving Grounds and was instrumental in developing the M24. He said that he specified the .27 part to make people think that it was some magical formula for shooting the 175 Sierra bullet and that 1-11.25 works just fine. He laughed.
I like 1-11 for 308, my custom 308 has a Brux medium Palma 1-11 and shoots heavy (175 class) bullets very well. I think this group is smaller than .221 but it still ain't bad for five rounds.
Did any of the manufacturers make rifle with a factory twist of 1:11.25"? I've seen that twist rate touted by custom barrelmakers of late, but was it a common twistrate decades ago? Apologies for the question, but I don't know where to access such information online.30-06 seems to vary more rifle to rifle than 308 but standard 308 twist is 1:12, although some mfgs are starting to convert to 1:10 or 11 for it.
I know for a fact Winchester uses 1:10 in 30-06 and 1:12 in their 308. I think weatherby is the same. So I guess it depends what mfg you want to know about?
yes, all Remington 700 5R's were 11.25" twists for the 175 grain bullets. But with the advancement of faster twists stabilizing and manufacturing processes improving on bullets... the game has changed to faster twists, better overall. You can handle the heavies and get better performance, then we head into Left twist barrels over right twists....Did any of the manufacturers make rifle with a factory twist of 1:11.25"? I've seen that twist rate touted by custom barrelmakers of late, but was it a common twistrate decades ago? Apologies for the question, but I don't know where to access such information online.
there is an advantage, Gravitational pull, it will cancel out Spin drift. Go to the Hide to get all the details, very interesting stuffIs there an advantage to LH twist? Full disclosure...I was watching a video last night re: the King assassination. One of the issues in the case was that the bullet that killed him had a 1:11.25" twist rate, yet the rifle had a 1:10". As the rifle used was supposed to have been a Remington 760, I was wondering if there had been a variety of rifling twists in factory rifle barrels in or around 1968. The devil is always in the detailed minutiae. I think M1 Rifles, 1903s, et al, were all 1:12" twists, so the 1:11.25" struck me as odd.
It's not a 1:1 cancellation, it just lessens the effect and can even go the other way with really fast twists. Plus LH twist only cancels it out in the northern hemisphere. Sure most of us live in the northern hemisphere, but it's important to note as there's a surprising number of Aussies into long range shooting who might be below the equator, as well as southern Africans (by that I don't mean the country but the southern portion of the continent)there is an advantage, Gravitational pull, it will cancel out Spin drift. Go to the Hide to get all the details, very interesting stuff