This sort of bothered me to read. It reminds me that I started out loading at 2.251 COAL for my AR-15, only because it looked like that was about the max that looked like would fit, with a little to spare, in all the different AR-15 magazines I have. (My .204 is an AR-15.) The reason it bothered me, is I have the Hornady OAL gauge, and the .204 dummy round to check the chamber, yet never even checked the chamber on mine, because I ASSUMED that I could only load to the length that would fit in the AR-15 magazine, and feed correctly. Now you're saying an OAL as short as 2.235 is recommended for a bolt action the likes of Cooper. That makes me wonder if maybe mine should be shorter. They should feed even easier through the AR-15 action when shorter, and there's a possibility that every one of my cartridges, when being fed (semi-auto) is hammering the nose of the bullet out of shape, or putting a flat spot on it.Keith in Ga wrote:I talked with Rob Behr (before he left Cooper) and he gave me an oal of 2.235
Now Keith, you may be be using a gauge that measures off the ogive of the bullet. If that is the case, you need to be clear when you tell people what that "OAL" really means. Maybe I'm uninformed in thinking that means the same as "COAL", and if it does, may push a max charge of any given powder charge, past the safety zone if loaded too short. I hope I'm clear enough here. I'm saying your comment makes me want to check the chamber on my AR-15 upper in .204 Ruger to see if I can load these cartridges shorter. Maybe I'm actually jamming each round into the lands? ? Maybe loaded at 2.251", each bullet is hitting the top of the chamber as it feeds out of the magazine? My main concern is that if someone takes "2.235" as "COAL" (Cartridge Overall Length), then there is risk of loading charges that exceed safe pressures. If someone could look up the SAAMI "COAL" on .204 Ruger, I'd appreciate it. ammoguide.com lists "Max Overall Length" at 2.260, wherever that comes from.
I'm probably the least knowledgable of anyone on here when it comes to reloading, so please feel free to verify or dispell my concerns here. I'm off to measure the chamber on my rifle! Thanks!