If you don't want your bullets deformed don't put them in your chamber. Its that simple. All barrels reshape the bullet to one degree or another. If you wish you can take a rifle a single raw bullet and a hammer and see if you can get a bullet to go down your barrel without using the hammer.
Who said I don't want my bullets deformed?
BB, bullets just dont get deformed to any SIGNIFICANT difference by a rifle bore. I just measured the body of an E-Tip I revored @ 500 yards that pentrated a plywood target and plowed into frosted dirt, sand and gritty rock fragments behind it. It measured .307, identical to a new one fresh out of the box. It's tail is exactly the same, but it's nose is a little different eh. I think we know why that is and if anypart of the bullet would affected by the bore it would be the shank. So I think it's safe to assume that the nose left the bore in the same condition it entered it. Yeah, it's a monometal, but it is not tough enough to flex the bore outward to maintain it diameter any more than a jacket bullet. Maybe you think that the nose/ogive area of the jacketd bullet is slumping under pressure? If it is, I will suggest that you will get terrible accuracy with such a conditon.
As for the other experiences that members have posted, as I said previously, I will assume they have unknown erros in their results until proven otherwise. and I think I have sound reason to do so.
Some reading for you on this threadr
Somewhere in this forum is a discussion by Kirby of the many different barrels he tried during the early stages of developing the 7AM and adapting it to the 200 grain wildcat bullet. What he found was when you had more that 25% IIRC of the bearing surface under compression you began affecting the bullet adversely.
I don't doub it. But when you start adversley affecting the bullet, it's time to try something else. I do not believe we are discussing that. That's throwing oranges into a bushel of apples.
My advice to you is to go ahead and build your 56.5-375 Ruger and shoot soft bullets in it such as the 140 Berger out to a mile and keep careful records of your drops for about 500 rounds. And every once in a while let it go 50 rounds without cleaning. Also every once in a while take a shot at an animal at a mile where it really matters if you land the first (and only) bullet correctly. You will learn many strange and interesting things.
I may take you up on that advice, but I have a feeling that the B 140's will not hold up in that rifle.
I also have some advice for you, the next 257 or 7AM barrel you get, try nitriding them and feel free to shoot them without worry of quick errosion
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