I didn't really get the answer I was looking for, probably because I wasn't specific. My bad.
I have 2 concerns:
1. "Stripping" of the small bearing bands on your bullets in the shallow grooves of the micro-groove rifling. It's well-known that micro-groove rifling tends to strip softer (lead) bullets; your bullets aren't as soft as lead, of course, but could the smaller bearing bands (and therefore a smaller "bite" when the bullet takes the rifling) + the shallower "micro-grooves" = stripping?
2. Land diameter - The groove diameter of a micro-groove barrel is correct, .458" or so; it's actually the lands that are shallow, so that land diameter is greater. Doesn't that mean the sub-diameter section of the bullet (any bearing-band style bullet, not just yours) won't be in contact with the lands? Am I correct in assuming the land-diameter section is sized for a certain depth of groove?
I think a first step would be to confirm with Marlin the dimension specs of bore/groove they manufacture to and to take it from there. Would anyone have their contact information handy?
30th Nov.
Marlin does not have an e-mail facility on their website. Fat would you write them at:
Marlin Firearms Company,
P.O. Box 248,
North Haven, CT 0647.
and ask the question as we discussed it above? It will be faster than the cleft stick mail from Africa.
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Gerard Schultz
GS Custom Bullets
[This message has been edited by Gerard (edited 11-30-2001).]
[This message has been edited by Fat Bastard (edited 12-01-2001).]
Consider total land height. Say the average 6 groove 45 cal barrel has lands which are .004 high. 6 times .004 gives .024" for a value of total land wall/height for gripping the bullet. The Marlin is a 12 land barrel- assigning a value of 2.7 thou of land height, that gives .0324" of land height-- or 26% more land driving surface to grip the bullet. The driving side of the land does the work- keeping the bullet from slugging/slippage. The Marlin having 26% more driving side area surely should grip any jacketed bullet fine.
The spec for a 45-70 is 11.43mm (0.45") bore and 11.58 (0.4559") groove with a 458 Win Mag spec at 11.43mm bore and 11.63mm (0.4579") groove. Land height on a 45-70 should thus be 0.0059" and on a 458 WM 0.0079".
Specs such as those put forward by CIP bring uniformity to the industry and I am amazed at the number of manufacturers of bullets as well as barrels that seem to disregard them. Fortunately, in SA the specs adopted by the SA Beureau of Standards from the CIP standard, forms part of our enforcable legislation. Out of spec bullets, components and barrels are therefore technically prosecutable under criminal law. I do not know if it has ever been done, but it is there.
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Gerard Schultz
GS Custom Bullets
A large bore of course will produce less pressure that a tight one. Keeps the manufacturer out of any possible litigation a tight one might produce. And the vast majority of the shooting public doesn't know the difference anyway.
As far as liability is concerned, it occurs to me that if something is out of spec over or under, the user has a case against the manufacturer. I would rather have a tight barrel and chamber as it is less likely to cause problems than a loose one. One thinks of case necks splitting and case head separation and such.
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Gerard Schultz
GS Custom Bullets
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"Use A Big Enough Gun!"
Here are the numbers:
Ballard rifling - groove dia = .456 - .458
land dia = .450 - .452
Micro-groove - groove dia = .458 - .4595
land dia = .452 - .4535
If the Marlin guy and I understood each other, the depth of the grooves is the same for both types (0.006). This does not square with their statement that the grooves on the micro-groove are shallower.
This is all academic, since they no longer use micro-groove in their 45-70.
Personally I wouldn't be concerned with shearing lead, after all even though the rifling is narrower there are more of them.
That statement is simply not true, disregardless of rifling type. Soft bullets will not hold the rifling in any type of land/groove style to the manner in which hard cast will. And at what speed and chamber pressure they start to slug/skip over the rifling depends on the barrel quality, the original size of the bullet and it's hardness, lube, and likely many other variables.
I like micro's very much. As with any barrel shooting cast- the keys are rear gas seal to keep gases from coming up the bullet sides, fitting/filling the throat again for seal and alignment, and a smooth, uniform bore free of jacket fouling.