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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Wildcat question
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<blockquote data-quote="nvschütze" data-source="post: 1792163" data-attributes="member: 110896"><p>When bending a metal to 90 degrees over and over again, it will soon fatigue and fail. I chose the same shoulder angle on my two mildcats as is found on the .30-06 Springfield. If I remember correctly out of hundreds and hundreds of fired rounds, I had one or two split necks. I used the gentle '06 angle in order to get smooth & reliable feeding. Using 3500 grains of powder per round was not a design parameter...</p><p></p><p>I clicked on the saubier.com link. It worked for me...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nvschütze, post: 1792163, member: 110896"] When bending a metal to 90 degrees over and over again, it will soon fatigue and fail. I chose the same shoulder angle on my two mildcats as is found on the .30-06 Springfield. If I remember correctly out of hundreds and hundreds of fired rounds, I had one or two split necks. I used the gentle '06 angle in order to get smooth & reliable feeding. Using 3500 grains of powder per round was not a design parameter... I clicked on the saubier.com link. It worked for me... [/QUOTE]
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Wildcat question
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