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One of Us |
Hey guys I'm thinking of having a custom single shot rifle with a falling block action built and I'm leaning towards a 256 Win Mag. Looking for info on loads, accuracy, and velocity from a 26" barrel. Any advice setting up a chamber for the 75 gr Hornady VMax and formed Starline brass? Would like to every once of accuracy from this round. Please share your advice & experiences. Thanks, Alan | ||
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One of Us |
i have one in a martini cadet. being one of my favorite actions it met with the 256 very well. I've never used 75 gr bullets because the case capacity i think if a bit small for that. 60 gr bullet with 16.5 gr of IMR 4227 works well for me. I use the hornady bullet because its about the only one out there and I'm not fond of it because its a flat point. speer used to make a dandy 60 gr spitzer but hasn't for a long time now. can't tell you about starline brass I've only used win. but the load above has been my standard load for something like 35 years now. | |||
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One of Us |
Have you thought about a 25/20? Might be a little easier to find brass for and the longer neck would be nice should you ever want to play with lead bullets. | |||
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one of us |
I also have a Martini Cadet in 256 Win. It's a great little cartridge with quite a bit more punch than the 25/20. Cases are easy to form from common 357 mag brass with one pass through the 256 FL die. If you don't reload then the 25/20 might be a better choice but the 256, IMO, is a much better small 25 cal cartridge. 357 mag brass is stronger (and thicker) than 25/20 and lasts a long time. One "tip"...previously fired 357 mag brass is very likely to split during forming if it has not been anneled. New brass almost never splits. I guess the high pressure developed in the 357 mag work hardens the brass and makes it brittle. | |||
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One of Us |
I used to shoot 'chucks and turkeys with a Marlin 62 using 60 grain Hornadys for the 'chucks and 86 grain Remington 25-20 bullets for the turkeys. I think that you can often find new 256 Win Mag brass on Ebay, if you don't want to make cases from 357 Mag. Jeff | |||
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One of Us |
i converted a savage 220 shotgun to a rifle in 256 win mag. i have found making cases fairly straight forward. use new brass 357 magnum cases in the sizing die with imperial wax lube. everything comes out ok. | |||
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One of Us |
I had one on a Martini Cadet action for a couple of years. It shot well with original factory ammo and even better with 75 grain spitzers. By well, I mean 3/4" at 100 yards for 5 shots off the bench, consistently. I got about 2400 fps with the 75 grain bullets, which is a good deal better than a .25-20 will do with the same weight. I sold the gun to raise money for a double rifle. If I had it to do over, I'd still have the Martini and just reached deeper in my pocket for the DR. | |||
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one of us |
You could go a short step up to the .256 Max. Since you are going to have to form cases anyway, you might as well form them from .357 Max cases. It is a good citizen's duty to love the country and hate the gubmint. | |||
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