G'day Gents
I did a job recently where i fitted a barrel to a Surgeon 1086 repeater in 7mm WSM. The job went with no issues and i set the counter bore with a generous clearance of around .030". However when i tried to chamber an actual piece of brass, it wouldn't chamber. It was discovered that the M16 style extractor was jamming in the counter bore while trying to jump over the case rim. I had no issues with the "GO" gauge but it turns out that my PT&G gauge is 0.010" smaller in the rim than the actual brass! I removed the barrel and opened out the counter bore another 0.015 which fixed the issue..
The whole scenario got me thinking, why do manufacturers bother with a counter bore in the first place, if it requires so much clearance? Wasn't the whole concept of Remington's counter bore design so that in the instance of a case head failure that the bolt nose would expand into the counter bore and seal it off, preventing or minimizing gas escape?
Why bother having a counter bore at all if there is so much clearance that it would never expand enough to seal, let alone accounting for the cutout for the extractor claw it's self?
Why not just have the lugs extend forward to the bolt nose, and cut the Tennon flat?
Dosen't make much sense to me.
Discuss..
Cheers
Lee
I did a job recently where i fitted a barrel to a Surgeon 1086 repeater in 7mm WSM. The job went with no issues and i set the counter bore with a generous clearance of around .030". However when i tried to chamber an actual piece of brass, it wouldn't chamber. It was discovered that the M16 style extractor was jamming in the counter bore while trying to jump over the case rim. I had no issues with the "GO" gauge but it turns out that my PT&G gauge is 0.010" smaller in the rim than the actual brass! I removed the barrel and opened out the counter bore another 0.015 which fixed the issue..
The whole scenario got me thinking, why do manufacturers bother with a counter bore in the first place, if it requires so much clearance? Wasn't the whole concept of Remington's counter bore design so that in the instance of a case head failure that the bolt nose would expand into the counter bore and seal it off, preventing or minimizing gas escape?
Why bother having a counter bore at all if there is so much clearance that it would never expand enough to seal, let alone accounting for the cutout for the extractor claw it's self?
Why not just have the lugs extend forward to the bolt nose, and cut the Tennon flat?
Dosen't make much sense to me.
Discuss..
Cheers
Lee