While many handloaders claim to be weary of amazing new 6.5mm rounds, about as many new 6mm cartridges have appeared since 2000. These newer 6mms have faster rifling twists to stabilize heavier, high-ballistic coefficient bullets, but 6mms with faster twists and heavier bullets did not suddenly appear during the past 20 years. In fact, America’s earliest 6mm featured a 1:8 rifling twist, because the original bullet tested during the 6mm Lee Navy’s development in the mid-1890s was a 135-grain roundnose. Why? For the same reason most other early smokeless military cartridges used heavy, round-nosed bullets: The black-powder cartridges they replaced used heavy, blunt bullets.
Several other 6mm rounds soon appeared, primarily designed for hunting, including the 6x57 Mauser – the 7x57 necked down and almost identical to the .244 Remington, which appeared in 1955, the same year as the .243 Winchester. However, the .244’s factory “deer” bullet weighed 90 grains due to the 1:12 twist in the Model 722 rifle and the 6x57’s factory bullet weighed 123 grains.
Bu hikaye Handloader dergisinin October - November 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Handloader dergisinin October - November 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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OEHLER's New System 89 Chronograph
Measuring Bullet Performance Downrange
The Problem with Low Pressure Loads
Bullets & Brass
Measurements for Rifle Handloading
Handy Techniques for Accurate Ammunition
THE BRASS RING
In Range
Semi-custom Bullet Moulds
Mike's Shoot in' Shack
REVISITING THE 6.5 -06 A-SQUARE
Loading New Bullets and Powders
Cimarron Stainless Frontier .45 Colt
From the Hip
9x18mm Makarov
Cartridge Board
Alliant 20/28
Propellant Profiles
.224 Clark
Wildcat Cartridges