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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
EddieM
Hello Jim
Hey Eddie, I somehow wonder if maybe you're having a go at us again like the carbine you showed us...
But seriously, there have been replacement barrels for the M1
rifle in various calibers, other than .30 such as .308, 25/06, .270. That's a rebarrel though, not an ammo swap.
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08-21-2021 08:09 PM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
Hey Eddie, I somehow wonder if maybe you're having a go at us again like the carbine you showed us...
But seriously, there have been replacement barrels for the
M1
rifle in various calibers, other than .30 such as .308, 25/06, .270. That's a rebarrel though, not an ammo swap.
Come on Jim,
Are you serious?, all my doubts have been honest, when I got the Garand the seller gave me the clip with .270 ammo
Regards
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
EddieM
when I got the
Garand
the seller gave me the clip with .270 ammo
Interesting, then he must not have known what caliber it was. Criterion makes them... https://criterionbarrels.com/product...v=7516fd43adaa
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Legacy Member
The .270 Winchester cartridge may not even chamber because the shoulder is slightly longer to prevent mis-loading it in a .30-06 chamber.
You ask "any 150gr 30-06" ?? If you are talking about commercially loaded 150gr ammo the answer is NO.
Unless it is marked Safe for use in M1
Garand, then you risk bending your op rod and damaging the rifle and or yourself and others around you.
M1 Garands were built with a limit to the amount gas pressure they can handle for safe function.
Only use M2 ball ammo or ammo that is marked safe for M1 Garand. PPU makes M1 safe ammo, and there is alot of M1 safe ball ammo for sale on the internet.
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Thank You to rugersworld For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
rugersworld
PPU makes
M1
safe ammo,
PPU makes two grades of M2, one normal and one for the Garand. I know from experience that the normal one works fine in the M1, I've fired over 1000 rds of it, but it does throw the empties around 15 to 20 ft!
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Legacy Member
Hey Jim,
Thank you for the link 
---------- Post added at 07:27 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:25 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
rugersworld
The .270 Winchester cartridge may not even chamber because the shoulder is slightly longer to prevent mis-loading it in a .30-06 chamber.
You ask "any 150gr 30-06" ?? If you are talking about commercially loaded 150gr ammo the answer is NO.
Unless it is marked Safe for use in
M1
Garand, then you risk bending your op rod and damaging the rifle and or yourself and others around you.
M1 Garands were built with a limit to the amount gas pressure they can handle for safe function.
Only use M2 ball ammo or ammo that is marked safe for M1 Garand. PPU makes M1 safe ammo, and there is alot of M1 safe ball ammo for sale on the internet.
Hey Rugersworld
Thank you 
---------- Post added at 07:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:27 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
Ex Crab
PPU makes two grades of M2, one normal and one for the Garand. I know from experience that the normal one works fine in the M1, I've fired over 1000 rds of it, but it does throw the empties around 15 to 20 ft!
Hey Ex Crab
thank you
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Moderator
(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)
The biggest issue with commercial, non-Springfield ammo is timing. The military ammo used an older formulation propellant that burns slower than the modern propellants. There's a sizable amount of timing involved in the feed system of a semi-auto rifle. The brass cartridge needs to expand at a predictable time to fill the chamber and seal it and then contract in time to be properly extracted. The extraction process is timed by the predictable expansion of gasses down the barrel and into the gas system to move the op rod. Change the burn rate and the parts of the system can cease to interact properly. It can be a little like a timing belt breaking in a zero-valve-clearance automobile engine. In the Garand
, the light end of effects can be failures to extract. The extreme end of the bad interaction can be bent op rods and damaged receiver heels. There are lots of examples of people getting by with it. It seems to work fine... until it doesn't. The odd time it doesn't work and we hear about that too.
Complicating this situation are hand loaders that can use the original propellant formula but accidentally overload their shells and cause the same results. Undocumented or poorly documented cases of hand load accidents on the Internet can be conflated with accidents from commercial loads And that is complicated by the fact that a hand loader might not want to let on that he screwed up his load. So, who knows how often it is commercial ammo vs. hand loads popping off a Garand?
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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Thank You to Bob Womack For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Bob Womack
The biggest issue with commercial, non-Springfield ammo is
timing. The military ammo used an older formulation propellant that burns slower than the modern propellants. There's a sizable amount of timing involved in the feed system of a semi-auto rifle. The brass cartridge needs to expand at a predictable time to fill the chamber and seal it and then contract in time to be properly extracted. The extraction process is timed by the predictable expansion of gasses down the barrel and into the gas system to move the op rod. Change the burn rate and the parts of the system can cease to interact properly. It can be a little like a timing belt breaking in a zero-valve-clearance automobile engine. In the
Garand
, the light end of effects can be failures to extract. The extreme end of the bad interaction can be bent op rods and damaged receiver heels. There are lots of examples of people getting by with it. It seems to work fine... until it doesn't. The odd time it doesn't work and we hear about that too.
Complicating this situation are hand loaders that can use the original propellant formula but accidentally overload their shells and cause the same results. Undocumented or poorly documented cases of hand load accidents on the Internet can be conflated with accidents from commercial loads And that is complicated by the fact that a hand loader might not want to let on that he screwed up his load. So, who knows how often it is commercial ammo vs. hand loads popping off a Garand?
Bob
Hey Bob
Your feedback is very interesting I really appreciate it
Regards
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Contributing Member
There was an article in the GCA
Journal a while back, the exact article I can't re-read as we moved and when downsizing I gave all my older Journal's to members of the gun club I belong to. Using the GCA Journal searchable spread sheet I believe it was Issue 34-1-23 Winter 2019 first key word "M2 Ball Facts vs. Myth". It was a controversial stance but well researched, if you have access to the article it can provide additional insight.
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Legacy Member
Can you? Probably yes. Should you? You pays your money, you takes your chances. Will it blow up? Smaller bullet, not likely. Cant fire because of the shoulder? Nonsense. 270 case length (OAL) is the same as the 30-03. Something like 0.10" longer than the 30-06, not enough to prevent chambering. Accurate? No data to prove yes or no. Shooting any 150 grain 30-06, probably OK but a 150 grain at 2,700 fps is definitely OK. If it was 3,000 fps you might want to think about it in an M1
as a steady diet. A 180 grain at 3,000 fps is probably too hot for an M1 day in and out.
Dave
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