Re: Fire forming brass for 7mm Rem. Mag
Bob338
Fair enough! I didn't think of that...
jpb
01 July 2004, 06:33
Bob338You are correct on the shorter body on the 358 Norma, which is an advantage. In the 300, the neck takes part of the shoulder in the reforming and you then have to ream or neck turn with the strong possibility of an eccentric neck. You also end up with the probability of donuts as you resize. Bin dere, dun dat.
01 July 2004, 08:58
RicochetThere's a problem missed in some of the above explanations. The spec for 7mm RM and all other belted magnums is for headspacing on the belt, not the shoulder. Sure, we all use the shoulder to headspace after neck sizing or partially FL resizing and that cuts down on working the brass. But he said the cases were going too far into his chamber. That means TC didn't cut the shoulder for the belt right, allowing the cases to go in the chamber until the shoulder stops it. That's wrong. It means that new cases are all going to get worked excessively, as they're made short (which was pointed out above) to allow headspacing on the belt.
01 July 2004, 06:49
worriedmanIs Norma the only firm that makes the 358 brass? I have looked all over the net, and still can not find a drawing of the 358 Norma Mag. cartridge to compare with the 7 mm. Midway's site is down today, guess I will have to wait till I get home to check their catalog to see if they carry it.