CASE EXPANSION MEASUREMENT
Handloader|October - November 2020
PRACTICAL HANDLOADING
Rick Jamison
CASE EXPANSION MEASUREMENT

Handloaders have seen the recommendations in load manuals and elsewhere for determining a maximum load with a micrometer. The usual method is to mark each case at the web, then using a blade micrometer, measure each case after firing to see how much the diameter enlarges. Through the years there have been variations on this process. The locations to measure, whether web, expansion ring, extractor groove, rim or belt have varied, as has the amount of acceptable expansion.

Today, however, there appears to be more of a consensus than ever about measuring, at least from the bullet and powder companies. The web is reported to be the best location on a rimless case, and one should quit adding powder when .0005 inch of expansion has been observed. They say it’s best to measure a minimum of three cases at each level as a handloader progresses in small charge weight increments.

This is one of those ideas that sounds straightforward and simple. Try it sometime. It brings to mind the words of the late gunsmith Bob West. He once commented that anyone who claims to be able to hold machining tolerances to .0001 inch is kidding himself. Those were in the days when gunsmiths relied on manually operated lathes and milling machines, but the point was made. The idea that someone cantote a micrometer to the range in a shooting box and whip it out to determine a maximum load is a similar situation.

This story is from the October - November 2020 edition of Handloader.

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This story is from the October - November 2020 edition of Handloader.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.