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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
338 wsm
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<blockquote data-quote="etisll40" data-source="post: 750443" data-attributes="member: 15229"><p>I think the idea of feeding issues is to consider. I like the route that is most reliable to feed, best brass and loading long bullets in a short action. What wins with this in mind? Please chime in, especially if you've done some gunsmithing. Gun and case design are important. It reminds me not to try and put a square in a round hole. I'm wondering if dropping down to a 250 grain 338 call bullet gets the job done as well as a 300 grain and driving it a little faster. Why really use a 300 grain in a short action? It seems that driving a bullet in the 2900-3100 range, no less/more is most efficient.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="etisll40, post: 750443, member: 15229"] I think the idea of feeding issues is to consider. I like the route that is most reliable to feed, best brass and loading long bullets in a short action. What wins with this in mind? Please chime in, especially if you've done some gunsmithing. Gun and case design are important. It reminds me not to try and put a square in a round hole. I'm wondering if dropping down to a 250 grain 338 call bullet gets the job done as well as a 300 grain and driving it a little faster. Why really use a 300 grain in a short action? It seems that driving a bullet in the 2900-3100 range, no less/more is most efficient. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
338 wsm
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