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    Bullet tumbling

    I finally got to the range with my No.1 mkIII Enfield. I bought some Wolf gold 174 gr ammo to try out. Every round I shot went through the target sideways at 50 and 100 yds. What would cause this? The barrel looks to have good rifling to me but I am new to Enfield Riflesicon and I am looking for any ideas or suggestions before I take it out again. Thanks in advance

    Dan
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    A Collector's View - The SMLE Short Magazine Lee Enfield 1903-1989. It is 300 8.5x11 inch pages with 1,000+ photo’s, most in color, and each book is serial-numbered.  Covering the SMLE from 1903 to the end of production in India in 1989 it looks at how each model differs and manufacturer differences from a collecting point of view along with the major accessories that could be attached to the rifle. For the record this is not a moneymaker, I hope just to break even, eventually, at $80/book plus shipping.  In the USA shipping is $5.00 for media mail.  I will accept PayPal, Zelle, MO and good old checks (and cash if you want to stop by for a tour!).  CLICK BANNER to send me a PM for International pricing and shipping. Manufacturer of various vintage rifle scopes for the 1903 such as our M73G4 (reproduction of the Weaver 330C) and Malcolm 8X Gen II (Unertl reproduction). Several of our scopes are used in the CMP Vintage Sniper competition on top of 1903 rifles. Brian Dick ... BDL Ltd. - Specializing in British and Commonwealth weapons Specializing in premium ammunition and reloading components. Your source for the finest in High Power Competition Gear. Here at T-bones Shipwrighting we specialise in vintage service rifle: re-barrelling, bedding, repairs, modifications and accurizing. We also provide importation services for firearms, parts and weapons, for both private or commercial businesses.
     

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    Slug your bore to find out what it is. Some of those old bores will go .318 In that case you are limited to cast bullets of that size or .002 over.

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    Wolf projectiles are generally quite consistent.

    Old Lee Enfield barrels are not.

    I had one on the bench the other day that was a corker. It came in with a target shot at 50m. The "group" was about 10" diameter and EVERY bullet had gone through sideways. Ammo was "Highland", (locally badged Privi Partizan.)

    Yes, there was still some rifling left in the barrel, but it had a surface grade akin to 50 grit sandpaper. At the muzzle there was a distinct "flared" look.

    The owner seemed to think it was odd that new ammo would shoot so badly in his family heirloom barrel.

    Once again: .303 barrels were ALLOWED to run out to .318" groove diameter according to the original spec. The will perform well enough for "government work" with THE RIGHT AMMO. soft-point, BOAT TAILS are NOT the right ammo.

    However, if your rifling is clean and sharp(ish), AND your throat and leade are not burned out, AND your muzzle is free from major cord-wear or other damage, it will shoot this ammo OK, or at least, for as long as it takes to really burn out the throat.

    If there is a creative bullet maker out there who is willing to run up a couple of million flat based .311" - .312" FMJ projectiles of approx 174Gn weight, I am sure they would be well rewarded for their efforts. NO boat-tails!!

    I photocopied the target "for the files": a true classic. I will try to post it ASAP.

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    Wolf gold 174 gr ammo is actually Prvi Partizan ammo made in Serbia.

    Here is your problem you are shooting a boat tail bullet and your Enfield doesn't like shooting them, you need to try a flat base bullet.

    Wolf Gold and Prvi Partizan ammo below.



    Standard Britishicon military ammunition for the Enfield was Mk.7 flat base ammo.



    You are shooting the equivalent of Mk.8z boat tail machine gun ammunition.

    Try some 180 grain Remington hunting ammo with a flat base bullet, if the bullet still hits sideways or keyholes you then have a worn barrel problem.

    NOTE: When a flat base bullet is fired the kick in the seat of the pants makes the base of the bullet expand and fill the bore. A boat tail bullet when fired does not expand to fill the bore and fails to stabilize properly and keyholes or hits the target sideways.

    The Rebated boat tail bullet below is like the British Mk.8z ammunition.


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    Dan,

    I had the same problem with my No4 Mk1,

    Attachment 13870 Attachment 13871

    By all means try flat based projectiles & you may get a good result, but my advice is, bite the bullet (!) and rebarrel it.

    Worked for me & I now have a very accurate shooter. (with round holes, not long ones)

    Cheers, David
    Last edited by Cruisey; 07-04-2010 at 04:46 AM.

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    Thread Starter
    Thanks for all the replies. First I'll slug the bore to see what it measures, then I'll take the advise given and try the Remington 180gr flat base ammo and see what happens. I'll report the results here. Thanks again

    Dan

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    My standard test loading for all .303 rifles uses the Sierra 180 flat-base bullet. I think they call this one the 'Pro Hunter'. It does work rather well for this purpose.

    I run them at about 2250 ft/sec, which you can get easily with 37 or 38 grains of IMR-4895. This was discovered, during the pre-1910 adoption, to be the most accurate velocity for nearly all .303 rifles used with the new Mark VII. I seat to the overall length of a Mark VII Ball round. The Sierra bullet has a different ogive than the Mark VII, and this does tend to crowd the leade just abit. Still, most rifles I have tried seem to like it.

    Hornady also makes good flatbase .303 slugs, these in .312 diameter. Their 174, though, is a RN. I do wish they would do up the 174 as a PSP, retaining the flat base, and give us a 215 RN; I know that I certainly would stock up on them for my Lee-Speed, old AG Parker s/n 19 and the SparkbrookS (kindly note the "S": I am terribly proud, even if one is a sporter and the other junk being resurrected).

    The HORNADY 150, though, is entirely a different kettle of fish, being a "Spire Point" flatbase and it has a very convenient cannelure. These I run up just about to .308 velocities and, so far, there have been no signs of distress among any of my crowd. This bullet, ahead of 40 grains of 4064, seems to be just about the perfect load for the P.-'14 rifle, making ragged little 6-round, 1-hole groups at 145 yards. Seating is so that the entire cannelure shows at the case mouth.

    If you're out buying commercial ammo, all you have to do is buy the cheapest North American stuff that is available. Generally, it is loaded with flatbase bullets. It's the 'Premium-grade' stuff which is loaded with those pesky BT slugs, costs more and doesn't shoot worth a hoot in some rifles.

    Still, I do wish somebody would turn out a .314" bullet. Collecting on MY budget, you really NEED them! LOL!

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    Update... I went to the range today with the 180 gr Remington flat base bullets. Every one still through the paper sideways. I slugged the barrel and the bore checks .307 dia and .317 groove dia. The muzzle end will accept a .308 dia gage pin about 1/4 inch deep. It looks like my options are to replace the barrel, or look into reloading some special size bullets unless there is something else I can do. Thank you all for your help.

    Dan

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    Before you do that, just try a lighter bullet. It should be shorter. It may make a difference. It's cheaper than rebarrelling.

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    You might try some actual MkVII bullets before you consider rebarreling. The open flat base bullets, unlike the commercial closed base soft points, may upset enough to egage the rifling. Whilst much of the Pakistani surplus AMMUNTION is poo, the bullets themselves are OK. This ammo is still fairly available and not too expensive. Try some, if the ammo is not good just pull the bullets and use them. (Usually the hangfire stuff still groups well enough off the bench to see if the rifle will stabilize the bullets. The stuff that won't fire at all might not be as informative...)
    Last edited by jmoore; 07-10-2010 at 12:41 AM.

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