antelopedundee
internet bum
Being a fan of the 6.5 caliber, I was somewhat curious about the 6.5-270WSM cartridge so I did a bit of internet searching. I came across a discussion of it, the 6.5-06 and the 270WSM. This was on the savageshooters.com website message boards. A poster was looking to build a 270WSM or 6.5-06.
As a recommendation for the 6.5-06 one poster made the following statement since cases for the 6.5-06 are easiest to make from .25-06 cases. The post is about 6 years old.
"It would be nearly the same for the 6.5-06. I would choose to neck up 25-06 brass instead of necking down other brass. Just run it into the 6.5-06 die and your done forming. Necking up brass is an easier step than necking down. Check the length and you're good to go."
So how on earth do you neck up a smaller case by running it up into a larger die? The proper way to expand the neck would be to use a carbide mandrel and you'd probably want that in a .270 size die.
Why not simply seat the 6.5 bullet in the .25-06 case without doing anything else. If a boattail bullet is used there should be little chance of squishing the neck or collapsing the shoulder. So would seating a bullet like that result in too much neck tension? Is it possible to have such a thing as too much neck tension? I've never had any issues with seating 6.5 bullets in .25-06 cases.
Another approach would be to use once-fired .25-06 cases since the neck on those would be a bit larger than on new brass, but likely not require any additional tinkering. If one used .270 cases, they'd need to be trimmed about .050 and sized in the 6.5-06 FL die.
As a recommendation for the 6.5-06 one poster made the following statement since cases for the 6.5-06 are easiest to make from .25-06 cases. The post is about 6 years old.
"It would be nearly the same for the 6.5-06. I would choose to neck up 25-06 brass instead of necking down other brass. Just run it into the 6.5-06 die and your done forming. Necking up brass is an easier step than necking down. Check the length and you're good to go."
So how on earth do you neck up a smaller case by running it up into a larger die? The proper way to expand the neck would be to use a carbide mandrel and you'd probably want that in a .270 size die.
Why not simply seat the 6.5 bullet in the .25-06 case without doing anything else. If a boattail bullet is used there should be little chance of squishing the neck or collapsing the shoulder. So would seating a bullet like that result in too much neck tension? Is it possible to have such a thing as too much neck tension? I've never had any issues with seating 6.5 bullets in .25-06 cases.
Another approach would be to use once-fired .25-06 cases since the neck on those would be a bit larger than on new brass, but likely not require any additional tinkering. If one used .270 cases, they'd need to be trimmed about .050 and sized in the 6.5-06 FL die.