Quote Originally Posted by Lee Enfield View Post
There is a lot of BS floated regarding 7.62 conversions of the Lee Enfield.

Simply put, be aware that .308Win and .303 Britishicon have identical case capacity of 56 grains of water.

If you are concerned with weakness of the No4 action when converted to .308/7.62 simply use .303British load data for that weight of projectile.

It may (or not) surprise you to know that the common fall back load 174-180grain bullets for .303 Brit of 41-42grains of IMR4895 - is the exact same load used for 7.62 NATO 175grain (and 168grain) match loadings....

As always, load data is specific to my firearms, primers, cases used, bullet seating ect play a role in creating pressure.
That is very interesting. I had not realised the case capacities where the same, looking at the them I would have always assumed .303 was greater.

Will a 7.62 round with the same mass bullet not develop more chamber pressure due to the bottle neck carriage and relatively smaller bullet diameter? That said will I would assume that to be the case, I have no idea if it is material or not? Any fluid dynamics experts please chime in now...

---------- Post added at 05:19 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:15 PM ----------

Quote Originally Posted by Parashooter View Post
You are comparing apples and pomegranates. The 20 ton (44800 lb.) figure is the archaic axial crusher measurement (normally some 10-15% below SAAMI radial crusher figures - expressed today as "CUP") and the SAAMI 62000 psi number is a piezo transducer result. SAAMI MAP for .308 Win. is 52000 CUP. Essentially, all these numbers represent the same pressure - it's the measuring systems that differ.

As a sanity check, consider the .303 British at -
41440 lb. (18.5 tons) axial crusher,
45000 CUP SAAMI crusher MAP,
49000 psi SAAMI transducer MAP.
Thank you I was really hoping some one would come in with this! I could remember reading this a while back (before I had a 7.62) but couldn’t find it so was hoping this would prove it without leading too much. Cheers!