With Bolt Action Is Not Minimal Headspace Acceptable ?
raindog has brought up an interesting topic (especially for us owners of ancient military rifles).
Let me throw out a comment and see if there is any disagreement :
For a bolt action rifle the most desirable amount of headspace is where the bolt will just close (without undue pressure) - this should result in maximum support to the rear of the brass.
To me the most perplexing part of trying to understand headspacing was that descriptions were not at all clear on what was meant. As I thought about it to a greater degree, and read more, it became clear that at least part of the problem is that the 'official' definition of headspace is measured from the point in the breech that prevents the cartridge from going any further back to where the head of the brass cartridge case is. For a rimmed cartridge like the British .303 this is easy to understand as it is what your intuition tells you. For any other type of cartridge you have to ask yourself 'What keeps this cartridge from going further ?' For rimless cartridges with the 'classic' Mauser .473 inch diameter cartridge head this means looking at where the brass case is swaged down to the diameter necessary to provide a snug fit around the bullet. I believe (?) that for these cartridges the 'stopping point' is defined as half-way along the swaged area; with that as the 'zero point' the distance back to the rearmost part of the cartridge case is the measured headspace (even though what we're really interested in is how much space exists between the cartridge case and the bolt head).
Any disagreements ?