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Seating depth of 77 gr MatchKing

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  • cpatbay
    Senior Member
    • May 2011
    • 1631

    Seating depth of 77 gr MatchKing

    I know the absolute max OAL for .223 Remington is 2.260" and the "correct" way to determine the preferred OAL for my rifle is to measure with an Overall Length Gage (like the Hornady one). I want to experiment with a few shorter than 2.26" OAL but I am wary of higher chamber pressure at shorter OAL with these long 77 gr bullets.

    So, what would be a reasonably "safe" min OAL I could use as an ending point?
    NRA Lifer

    No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason
    for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort,
    to protect themselves against tyranny in government - Thomas Jefferson


  • #2
    rg1
    Member
    • May 2008
    • 274

    I seat them to 2.250" and they show no pressure signs with book loads. I find them to feed more reliably in my more than one AR. I can't see any accuracy difference seating them .010" shorter than magazine maximum length.

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    • #3
      brando
      Veteran Member
      • Feb 2006
      • 3694

      Yeah, what he said. They're pretty long bullets, so you're not going to be able to seat that much deeper than mag length, but there is about 0.01" to play with. Personally, my Mk262 clone load is right at mag length.
      --Brando

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      • #4
        Jonathan Doe

        Sierra 77 grain MK is designed to be seated to magazine length. I load to the maximum length that would fit in my magazines.

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        • #5
          Ahhnother8
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2007
          • 1454

          Originally posted by cpatbay
          I want to experiment with a few shorter than 2.26" OAL but I am wary of higher chamber pressure at shorter OAL with these long 77 gr bullets.
          The deeper you seat them the lower the velocity, caused by lower chamber pressure. Shoot over a chrono to see for yourself.

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          • #6
            cpatbay
            Senior Member
            • May 2011
            • 1631

            Originally posted by Ahhnother8
            The deeper you seat them the lower the velocity, caused by lower chamber pressure. Shoot over a chrono to see for yourself.
            This is counter intuitive, isn't it? If you seat it deeper, the volume in the case reduces. As powder burns, lower volume should result in higher pressure, right?
            NRA Lifer

            No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason
            for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort,
            to protect themselves against tyranny in government - Thomas Jefferson


            Comment

            • #7
              rumblebee
              Senior Member
              • May 2009
              • 1264

              I just got back from the range and was testing the 77gr SMK's. My COL: 2.243 with 23.5gr of Varget. Got a .600 (5) shot group on a pretty windy day. I also tested 2.260 and was not happy with it. My Tikka really seems to like COL:2.243 with the 77gr SMK's and the 75gr Horn BTHP.

              Good luck
              Last edited by rumblebee; 09-02-2011, 8:00 PM. Reason: correct gr on charge
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              • #8
                popeye4
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2008
                • 1534

                Originally posted by cpatbay
                This is counter intuitive, isn't it? If you seat it deeper, the volume in the case reduces. As powder burns, lower volume should result in higher pressure, right?
                The bullet moves, increasing "combustion chamber" volume rather quickly. You get into pressure issues when you seat the bullet into the lands, significantly increasing the resistance to initial bullet movement. I don't think seating deeper into the case is going to significantly change the pressure, unless you are getting really silly about it. I also don't think you'll see much difference in accuracy, as the Sierra 77 gr MK is designed to "jump" (for the 300 rapid fire event in highpower, you HAVE to load from the magazine).
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                • #9
                  popeye4
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 1534

                  Originally posted by rumblebee
                  I just got back from the range and was testing the 77gr SMK's. My COL: 2.243 with 23.5gr of Varget. Got a .600 (5) shot group on a pretty windy day. I also tested 2.260 and was not happy with it. My Tikka really seems to like COL:2.243 with the 77gr SMK's and the 75gr Horn BTHP.

                  Good luck
                  Keep in mind that the true datum point you should be measuring from is the diameter where the bullet contacts the rifling, not the tip. There are tools made specifically for making this measurement. Base to tip dimensions can have quite a bit of variability, particularly in HPBT match bullets.
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                  • #10
                    cpatbay
                    Senior Member
                    • May 2011
                    • 1631

                    Originally posted by popeye4
                    The bullet moves, increasing "combustion chamber" volume rather quickly. You get into pressure issues when you seat the bullet into the lands, significantly increasing the resistance to initial bullet movement. I don't think seating deeper into the case is going to significantly change the pressure, unless you are getting really silly about it. I also don't think you'll see much difference in accuracy, as the Sierra 77 gr MK is designed to "jump" (for the 300 rapid fire event in highpower, you HAVE to load from the magazine).
                    So, I should seat these 77 gr MK deeper for optimum performance? What would be considered "silly" deep?
                    NRA Lifer

                    No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason
                    for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort,
                    to protect themselves against tyranny in government - Thomas Jefferson


                    Comment

                    • #11
                      popeye4
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2008
                      • 1534

                      Originally posted by cpatbay
                      So, I should seat these 77 gr MK deeper for optimum performance? What would be considered "silly" deep?
                      No, seat them to magazine length. They are designed to be relatively insensitive to "jump", so varying the "jump" shouldn't affect it much. This was out of necessity. These bullets were designed to be used in the rapid fire stages of highpower matches in AR15s (200 yd and 300 yd). They replaced the 69 gr. SMK. For the 600 yd stage, the 80 gr. SMK is used, but it won't fit a magazine, so the 77s are a compromise design. In order to fit the mag, they HAVE to jump. But they aren't better than the 80s (or 90s). Typically, though, the less jump the better the accuracy. How many shots are you using to conclude there is an effect? A 3 or 5 shot group is not going to be statistically meaningful.

                      Have you measured your rifle's chamber to determine exactly where the bullet touches the rifling? This is a good dimension to know if you are varying bullet seating depth.

                      "Silly" deep would be a judgement call, but pushing them back way into the case (much farther than magazine length) would qualify; I was imagining just the tip protruding from the case. You might start compressing the load.
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                      • #12
                        rumblebee
                        Senior Member
                        • May 2009
                        • 1264

                        10-4 on the below. I made my own tool, which is an applicable case (.223 or .308 neck split with dremel) and the applicable bullet (I run COL for each bullet I am loading). I'm not sure why, but my Tikka likes the "jump" and performs as well (if not better) than the COL's that were just off its lands. I've tried many different combinations.

                        I then read the below and gave up on the finding my magical distance to the lands (for now)



                        Anyway..not intending to hijack the OP's thread, just thought the Dan's above approach was interesting.

                        Originally posted by popeye4
                        Keep in mind that the true datum point you should be measuring from is the diameter where the bullet contacts the rifling, not the tip. There are tools made specifically for making this measurement. Base to tip dimensions can have quite a bit of variability, particularly in HPBT match bullets.
                        Support the NRA
                        http://nramemberscouncils.com/legs.shtml

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