MudRunner2005
Well-Known Member
I think all of the Sherman & SS cartridges are 40º shoulder, if I remember correctly...Looks like they are 30° shoulder, I may be wrong.
I think all of the Sherman & SS cartridges are 40º shoulder, if I remember correctly...Looks like they are 30° shoulder, I may be wrong.
I would like to talk to Rich Sherman, if he has at least .300 neck length on the 6.5 Sherman and .325 neck length on the 280 Sherman; he ranks amongst Brian Litz and George Gardner as far as a great cartridge case designer. As far as cycling in AR frames, I think there is a problem with pressure spikes in 40° shoulder in comparison to 30° shoulders, I may be wrong. These are scientific research issues that I am trying to find out.I think all of the Sherman & SS cartridges are 40º shoulder, if I remember correctly...
I already know that Rich is a good moral man. I need to know the best AR frame performers in 6.5, 7, and 7.62mm for battle rifles with the least erosion on barrel throats and mechanical injury. Cycling is important as in the 7mm SAW. DOD doesn't spend money on weapons that don't pan out.Rich is a member here. Send him a Private Message. His username is "elkaholic" (all lowercase, no quotes).
Are you trying to cash-in on the DOD looking for a new DMR cartridge? Or do you work for the DOD? Because I have several unannounced and custom designed wildcat cartridges specifically designed for AR15 platform that require little more than a barrel and bolt swap that would be amazing, and would possibly outperform the 7.62 NATO in a smaller package. The reason I say possibly is because I don't have any money to make them a reality...Unless the DOD wants to back me for components, dies, reamers, rifle parts, etc... and then I'll do all the research myself.I already know that Rich is a good moral man. I need to know the best AR frame performers in 6.5, 7, and 7.62mm for battle rifles with the least erosion on barrel throats and mechanical injury. Cycling is important as in the 7mm SAW. DOD doesn't spend money on weapons that don't pan out.
Do you think the carbon dissipated the heat or just insulated it from reaching the surface?
If it were an all steel barrel, the barrel would be hotter in the middle than both ends also. So not really very telling. My steel barrels are normally hottest from the throat forward over the next 8 inches. That's where the temperature and pressure are both highest inside the bore. Same location were heat checking/firecracking show in the bore with a bore scope.Just checked again...
Running some hot rodded 6.5s pushed by RL26 and the carbon wrap was hotter than the metal barrel end or the barrel nut junction...I really have no idea...