18 September 2015, 03:10
bigrdp51wildcat junkie
Military cases are made Ford Truck Tough and are either thicker or harder than commercial cases. As I was trying to show with the winchester case above, and the vary reason you could shoot hotter loads in your LC 8mm cases.
And added expense comes from making quality cases able to withstand higher pressures. Example Lake City 5.56 cases are harder and stronger than any commercial .223 cartridge case. "BUT" Lapua .223 cases are just slightly softer than Lake City abd very tough cases and Federal .223 cases come in last place being the softest.
Bottom line American ammunition manufactures are not going to make their 8mm cases as hard and to the same quality standards as Lake City or Lapua when our 8mm ammunition is only rated for 35,000 psi.
Part of the M16 jamming problems was found to be soft brass during the Congressional hearings.
So you were able to load your 8mm hotter because you were using the highest quality brass made to withstand higher pressures.
And you will not find a American commercial 8mm case made to the oridgnal military specifications.
Example below, both cases below were fired in the same Enfield rifle that the Winchester case was above. The Prvi Partizan case is .010 thicker in the base, its base is larger in diameter and it has thicker rims. Bottom line, neither of these European cases stretched and thinned in the base web area when fired the first time. And I have gotten over 32 reloadings out of the Prvi cases and they only die of split necks.
Therefore the European CIP sets higher pressure standards for the 8x57 and higher standards for the cases being used in them.
30 September 2015, 02:03
PaulHAfter messing with two modern actioned 8x57's for a few years, I don't feel a need to run to an estimated 60k. Holding around an estimated 48k- 52k has worked out fairly well accuracy and velocity wise. The estimated hottest load below is the cfe223 175grain Sierra load.
Favorite loads are with the 175,with the now defunct IMR 4007, and Pro 2000MR (not listed below). Both run about the upper side of 2600 ft/sec. Here's some for comparison.
Comparisons
Messing with Quickload. Here's some comparisons with actual data from confirmed loads.
Remington M700 Classic
Cartridge: 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet: .323, 170, Hornady RN 3235
Useable Case Capaci: 58.965 grain H2O = 3.829 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 2.897 inch = 73.58 mm
Barrel Length: 22.0 inch = 558.8 mm
Powder: IMR 3031
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
89 45.00 2577 2507 40837 99.8%
170gr Hornady RN, IMR-3031, 2.897 OAL, CCI-200 Primer, PPU Case.
45gr 2508fps .71"
Cartridge: 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet: .323, 170, Hornady RN 3235
Useable Case Capaci: 58.305 grain H2O = 3.786 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 2.865 inch = 72.77 mm
Barrel Length: 22.0 inch = 558.8 mm
Powder: IMR 4064
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
95 48.00 2580 2514 44782 95.8%
170gr Hornandy RN, IMR4064, CCI 200 Primer, OAL 2.86, PPU case.
48gr 2541fps .81"
Cartridge : 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 175, Sierra SP 2410
Useable Case Capaci: 57.211 grain H2O = 3.715 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.070 inch = 77.98 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : IMR 4007 SSC
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
97% 52.00 2645 2718 48722 92.5%
99% 53.00 2697 2827 51769 93.3%
175gr Sierra, IMR4007SSC, 3.07 OAL, WLR Primer, Win Case.
52gr 2619fps .82"
53gr 2670fps .63"
Cartridge : 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 200, Nosler PART SP 35277
Useable Case Capaci: 54.310 grain H2O = 3.526 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.050 inch = 77.47 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : IMR 4064
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
95% 45.00 2468 2704 48273 98.4%
200gr Parts, IMR4064, 3.05 OAL, WLR Primer, Win case.
45gr 2428fps .61"
Cartridge : 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 175, Sierra SP 2410
Useable Case Capaci: 57.211 grain H2O = 3.715 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.070 inch = 77.98 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : Hodgdon CFE223
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
93% 54.5 2838 3130 54836 99.2%
175gr Sierra, CFE223, 3.07 OAL, WLR Primer, Win Case.
54.5gr 2828fps 1.13"
Cartridge : 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 160, Barnes 'TTSX' BT 32362
Useable Case Capaci: 53.522 grain H2O = 3.475 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.050 inch = 77.47 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : Hodgdon CFE223
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
89% 49.00 2683 2557 42252 95.1%
160gr TTSX, CFE223, 3.05 OAL, WLR Primer, Win Case.
49gr 2675fps .73"
Cartridge: 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 150, Hornady SP 3232
Useable Case Capaci: 58.411 grain H2O = 3.793 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 2.970 inch = 75.44 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : Hodgdon H4895
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
89% 48.00 2762 2540 41808 95.2%
150gr Hornady, H4895, 2.970 OAL, WLR Primer, PMC Case.
48gr 2767fps
Cartridge: 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet : .323, 200, Nosler PART SP 35277
Useable Case Capaci: 54.727 grain H2O = 3.553 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.070 inch = 77.98 mm
Barrel Length : 24.0 inch = 609.6 mm
Powder : Norma 203B
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
93 46.80 2474 2719 48523 98.5
200gr Parts, N-203b, 3.07 OAL, WLR Primer, Win case.
46.8gr 2500fps .83"
Winchester M70
Cartridge: 8 x 57 IS (8 mm Mauser CIP)
Bullet: .323, 200, Nosler PART SP 35277
Useable Case Capaci: 53.896 grain H2O = 3.499 cm³
Cartridge O.A.L. L6: 3.030 inch = 76.96 mm
Barrel Length: 22.0 inch = 558.8 mm
Powder: IMR 4895
Fill Charge Vel Energy Pmax Prop.Burnt
93 46.00 2490 2753 49280 98.6
200gr Partition, IMR 4895, 3.03 OAL, CCI200 Primer, Nosler Case
46gr 2448fps .39"
23 February 2016, 07:31
Austin HunterI'd limit high pressure 8x57 loads to modern rifles like Remington 700, Mauser M03/M12, Tika, Sako, etc.
BUT - I've used my 8x57 to kill some big sh#t at moderate velocity:
200 gr Accubond 20" barrel @ 2.980"
Waterbuck - 160 yards
Red Stag - 80 yards
Elk - 60 yards
Red Stag - 250 yards
The first three were from Superior Ammo and around 2,285 fps. The last one is my load at 2,425 fps with 46 gr Varget.
I could easily get more if I wanted, but even at 250 yards, I shot the stag at an extreme quartering angle - basically in front of rear left hip (he was walking away and turned his head to the right to look back) and the bullet traveled straight through his guts and separated his heart from his lungs as I'd intended with the shot.
Now, I'm working on some Woodleigh 220 gr loads with RL-17. I want to run a higher velocity to get the same POA as the 200 gr load and decided to try RL-17 first because the calculated pressures with the cartridge full of powder are pretty moderate. I also have plenty room to play with seating depth - still at 2.980"