capona
Well-Known Member
dup.
If you can find some factory Ammo buy it and compare. I would start with a headspace gauge. Make sure die is set up correctly and check sized brass in your chamber before you load.You need to measure the shoulder on the brass that will chamber, and resize all your brass to that measurement.
Wilson Case Gauge (first)I picked up a new Tikka T3X in 6.5 Creedmoor and took it to the range. It is a great shooter after setting up the scope, all shots were touching with reloads at 100 yards. Pics attached. I shot various handloads and bullet weight combos.
The problem I encountered was that not all of my reloads would chamber. I have Montana Rifle Company 6.5 Creedmoor.
Conclusions are I have a very tight chamber in the new Tikka.
- Nine of the ten reloads would chamber in the Montana Rifle Company rifle.
- Three of the 10 had a stiff bolt handle as it was closing but still chambered.
- Only one of 10 would not chamber.
- Bullets were seated to factor spec. and COAL is factory.
- The brass is Nosler (only thing I could find at the time). I have Lapua now but not loaded.
- I trimmed and resized (Redding Dies) my spent brass.
- Feeding it into the Tikka it would not chamber. It did chamber in the Montana Rifle Company gun.
- Feeding the new Lapua brass into the Tikka is no problem.
What would you do if you were me?
1. Load the Lapua brass shoot it and then trim if needed and resize it to see if there are problems with the die.
2. Order a go gauge or take the rifle to a gunsmith and have them measure the chamber with a go gauge. ( I have heard of some problems with barrels being over-torqued from the factory when the barrel is set to 75 lbs problems go away.)
3. Order a Wilson Cartridge gauge to see if cartridges meet the minimum SAMII spec
4. Do something else I haven't thought of. Please explain.
Thank you!
View attachment 355053
That is a cool tool! I did a similar thing with a spent case by cutting a slot in the neck to the shoulder junction to visualize bullet depth to the neck/shoulder relationship. All the measurements in the world wouldn't console me as much as actually seeing it with my own eyes. BTW my measurements were correct.Get yourself an open slotted Sheridan gauge so you can see exactly where your issue is if it is a sizing related issue.
6.5 Creedmoor Ammunition Gauge
Choose between SLOTTED or NON-SLOTTED. AMMUNITION GAUGES are uniquely designed to check loaded ammunition, giving you the ability to check your factory ammunition or reloads against a spec chamber. The gauge is machined to the SAAMI minimum chamber spec for the 6.5 Creedmoor caliber. This…sheridanengineering.com
I have two 7mm LRMs that cannot cross brass. The shoulder bumps are the same but the chambers are slightly different. You will really need two sets of cases and two sizing dies. The shoulder bumps are likely different.I picked up a new Tikka T3X in 6.5 Creedmoor and took it to the range. It is a great shooter after setting up the scope, all shots were touching with reloads at 100 yards. Pics attached. I shot various handloads and bullet weight combos.
The problem I encountered was that not all of my reloads would chamber. I have Montana Rifle Company 6.5 Creedmoor.
Conclusions are I have a very tight chamber in the new Tikka.
- Nine of the ten reloads would chamber in the Montana Rifle Company rifle.
- Three of the 10 had a stiff bolt handle as it was closing but still chambered.
- Only one of 10 would not chamber.
- Bullets were seated to factor spec. and COAL is factory.
- The brass is Nosler (only thing I could find at the time). I have Lapua now but not loaded.
- I trimmed and resized (Redding Dies) my spent brass.
- Feeding it into the Tikka it would not chamber. It did chamber in the Montana Rifle Company gun.
- Feeding the new Lapua brass into the Tikka is no problem.
What would you do if you were me?
1. Load the Lapua brass shoot it and then trim if needed and resize it to see if there are problems with the die.
2. Order a go gauge or take the rifle to a gunsmith and have them measure the chamber with a go gauge. ( I have heard of some problems with barrels being over-torqued from the factory when the barrel is set to 75 lbs problems go away.)
3. Order a Wilson Cartridge gauge to see if cartridges meet the minimum SAMII spec
4. Do something else I haven't thought of. Please explain.
Thank you!
View attachment 355053
That is the answer you needed, he has it correct, and check the head space on the shoulder first of all.Lessons I have learned from having multiple rifles chambered in the same cartridge.
1. Buy and use separate dies
2. Buy and use separate brass
3. Chambers vary
4. Don't shoot reloads from one rifle in the other
5. A .002 shoulder bump in one rifle could equal .000 in another or .004.