one of us

| This is common in Marlin 1895s. You are just seeing the case conforming to the chamber of the rifle.
You learn something new everyday whether you want to or not.
|
| Posts: 1080 | Location: Western Wisconsin | Registered: 21 May 2002 | 
IP
|
|
one of us
| I was wondering that jack, because after looking at my old brass, its about the same for 41gr loads as it is for 51gr. |
| Posts: 459 | Location: Finksburg, MD | Registered: 20 December 2003 | 
IP
|
|
one of us
| When your using the "case head expansion" methiod, the origional (factory) head size dosn't mean a F'in thing. Fire a box of factory loads (preferably using the same brand of case), THAN measure those (in several locations around the case head). Take the average of those measurments and consider that to be the maximum case head expansion "in that rifle". Keep your loads at or below that expansion. |
| Posts: 2124 | Location: Whittemore, MI, USA | Registered: 07 March 2002 | 
IP
|
|
one of us
| Compared to more modern cases the case walls near the head end of a 45/70 case are a little thin. It was never designed for the higher pressures being used by a lot of shooters today. I do not have a 95 but I have a 375 Marlin. The Marlin's chamber is sort of on the large side. The action may be strong enough for your loads but a large chamber and thin brass will limit what you can do safely and how many safe loads you can get. Weigh your Remington cases. I suspect they were heavier than the Winchesters or harder or both. I have some .45/70 Winchester brass that have been shot in 6 or 7 different 45/70s over the last 35 years including a Siamese bolt gun, #1 Rugers and 1885 Browning Highwalls. They would all bulge with high pressure loads. All these rifle are much stronger than a Marlin. To keep things safe I keep the pressure down so the bulge is not so pronounced. These 20 hulls have been fired so many times that 4 have cracked and burned a pin hole through about 1 inch above the head. |
| |
One of Us
| The case lies against the bottom of the chamber. I can only expand upward. This is common and not a pressure indication. Good Luck! |
| Posts: 1028 | Location: Mid Michigan | Registered: 08 January 2005 | 
IP
|
|
one of us

| quote: Originally posted by Tailgunner: When your using the "case head expansion" methiod, the origional (factory) head size dosn't mean a F'in thing. Fire a box of factory loads (preferably using the same brand of case), THAN measure those (in several locations around the case head). Take the average of those measurments and consider that to be the maximum case head expansion "in that rifle". Keep your loads at or below that expansion.
In the 45-70, most factory ammo has a pressure of around 21,000 PSI. The safe operating pressure of the Marlin 1895 45-70 is approximately 42,730 PSI. Factory 45-70 ammo and case head measurement will never allow one to determine loads for the potential of the Marlin 1895 45-70. If you use Buffalo Bore or Garretts good luck trying to find new brass that is the same as what they use. Additionally, case head expansion and pressure ring measurements are not reliable indicators of relative pressure.
You learn something new everyday whether you want to or not.
|
| Posts: 1080 | Location: Western Wisconsin | Registered: 21 May 2002 | 
IP
|
|
one of us
| Jack My main point being "the origional factory diameter" is a useless measurment. I do tend to make my answers generic, rather than specific, so your point on factory pressure levels vs what that rifle will take is be a valid one, in this case. |
| Posts: 2124 | Location: Whittemore, MI, USA | Registered: 07 March 2002 | 
IP
|
|