WidenersInline FabricationReloading EverythingMidSouth Shooters Supply
Lee PrecisionTitan ReloadingLoad DataRotoMetals2
Repackbox
Results 1 to 16 of 16

Thread: 40-82 WCF load development help please

  1. #1
    Boolit Mold
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    1

    Post 40-82 WCF load development help please

    Hi all
    This is my first post for help here on castboolits so if I’ve missed a previous thread on this subject please be kind enough to direct me there, I just don’t know the site well enough to have found it alone. Thanks

    My situation is that I’m about to take receipt of a cupboard queen. A virtually unused original 1903 1895 Marlin in 40-82 which according to the proof marks is one of the earlier examples proofed for nitro powders.

    The bore is in great condition if a little greyed with very strong rifling and no visual defects I could see with the borescope.

    Some of you may be of the opinion that I should preserve it as it is and I respect your right to hold that view.

    I am one of those who admire what our pioneering forefathers achieved with metallurgy and cartridge development during that transition period in firearms development to bring us the fabulous tools we enjoy today.

    I like to honour their work by using their works with care and respect and with the aim of maintaining it’s usefulness at a tool not an artefact.

    Have any of you guys taken a similar condition antique firearm back to a good shooting condition?

    When I’ve jumped through the legal hoops (I live in the UK) I eventually intend to work up some useful loads for the rifle with the eventual aim of using it as a highdays and holidays special event woodland stalker to bring her back to her original mission of food getter.

    I have yet to slug the bore so can’t give any details there but will do as soon as she arrives, I shoot a lot of cast bullets in my 444 1895, 357 1894 and Old Army, but nothing in .40 cal.

    Would anyone recommend to gas check or not to bring the bore back to life in the re break in period, this is new ground to me.

    Thanks for any help

  2. #2
    In Remembrance Reverend Al's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    Victoria, B.C., Canada
    Posts
    1,899
    Welcome to the wonderful world of .40-82 WCF! I used to shoot a Winchester 1886 with the rapid taper round barrel in .40-82 that had a beautiful bore, but I sold it in a weak moment when I was given an obscene amount of money for it (compared to what I originally paid). I found a lovely old Winchester 1885 High Wall octagon rifle to replace it and thankfully kept my Lyman mould and RCBS dies plus a reasonable supply of reformed .45-90 cases.



    When I first started shooting the '86 I got absolutely terrible results with the bullets keyholing through the target at 25 yards, but I found an old magazine article by Mike Ventrino on how to load for the .40-82 WCF cartridge with smokeless powder and cast boolits. (He was having the same keyholing troubles that I was encountering with an 1895 Marlin that a friend owned.) His fix was to use a filler to take up the excess air space in the large case. From memory his "magic" load was 35.0 grains of IMR3031 with bulk cornmeal filler to the base of the bullet so that it is a light crush fit when the cast boolit is seated. I also push a 1/4 sheet of toilet tissue down into the case with a wooden dowel to form a barrier between the powder charge and the cornmeal filler to keep them separated if I carry any of the loaded ammo afield with me where it might get "jostled about". I've used the same load in both the '86 I had and my current 1885 High Wall with excellent results. My '86 Winchester went from 6" groups with keyholing at 25 yards to 2" / 2 1/2" groups with no keyholing at 100 yards. Same cast boolit, same load, just with the addition of the filler. As a bonus the lightly abrasive bulk yellow cornmeal helps shine the bore up a bit. If I can find that article of Mike Ventrino's that I photocopied from the magazine I'll scan it and send a copy to you. I also feel the same as you. These lovely old guns were made to be shot and if properly maintaining it does them absolutely no harm. I just can't fathom owning a beautiful old gun in any calibre with a good shootable bore and NOT shooting it! Enjoy shooting your old Marlin '95 ...
    Last edited by Reverend Al; 03-04-2018 at 03:37 AM.
    I may have passed my "Best Before" date, but I haven't reached my "Expiry" date!

  3. #3
    Boolit Master rmcc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Central Iowa
    Posts
    553
    Reverend Al,

    I would like a copy of that article, also, if not too much trouble. I duplicated your recipe for a friend's 40/82 and worked great!!! My trouble is with a 1888 Trapdoor that shoots just as you describe at 25 yds.

    Thank you,
    rmcc

  4. #4
    Boolit Master
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    4,612
    You need to verify the twist of your rifling so you can use a bullet of the right length.

    You need to slug the bore so you know the groove diameter. Plan on having bullets .001" to .002" larger in diameter than your groove diameter.

    I have a modern .40-65 BPCR rifle and my accuracy is much better with gas checks than any plain base bullet and I have tried 4 plain base designs. I also use both 5744 and 4759 smokeless powders.
    EDG

  5. #5
    In Remembrance Reverend Al's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    Victoria, B.C., Canada
    Posts
    1,899
    The factory loaded .40-82 WCF rounds were a 240 to 260 grain bullet, sort of an "express" cartridge designed for higher velocity with lighter bullets rather than slinging big heavy bullets downrange. Most of the Winchester .40-82's slug at .406" to .408", but not sure about the Marlin '95's? The early Marlin 1881 models usually slugged smaller than the Winchesters. (I had an 1881 Marlin in .40-60 and it slugged at .403".)
    I may have passed my "Best Before" date, but I haven't reached my "Expiry" date!

  6. #6
    In Remembrance Reverend Al's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    Victoria, B.C., Canada
    Posts
    1,899
    I'll have a look in my reloading shop since I know that I kept a copy of Mike's article on loading for the .40-82 WCF ... it's just a matter of finding it!

    Quote Originally Posted by rmcc View Post
    Reverend Al,

    I would like a copy of that article, also, if not too much trouble. I duplicated your recipe for a friend's 40/82 and worked great!!! My trouble is with a 1888 Trapdoor that shoots just as you describe at 25 yds.

    Thank you,
    rmcc
    I may have passed my "Best Before" date, but I haven't reached my "Expiry" date!

  7. #7
    Boolit Master
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Outside Rolla, Missouri
    Posts
    2,170
    Sherman Bell in his series of articles "Finding Out For Myself" did a comprehensive pressure test series on fillers. His findings were fillers like Cream of Wheat, cornmeal, etc. often raised pressures too high. His findings were that cotton balls raised pressure the least...(who would have thought that?)...Dacron/poly fill was next least and open cell foam after poly. All three were safe. Grahme Wright's work indicated the same thing. Even before reading the articles by Bell and the book by Wright I had eschewed fillers like COW, cornmeal, etc.

    I used the load Rev. Al mentions by Venturino except I went to 34 grs. of IMR-3031 and it works well. I had some loads that had been setting on the shelf for several years. I got to wondering about them after I had been using open cell foam for several years so decided to pull some down and see what was going on in the case. I didn't like what I found. The cornmeal had nearly solidified and had to be dug out of the cases. I pulled them all and reloaded them with an open cell foam filler. That is just one loaders experience and others may have different results but, it was enough to put me off cornmeal, COW or any other filler of that kind.
    "In general, the art of government is to take as much money as possible from one class of citizens and give it to another class of citizens" Voltaire'

    The common virtue of capitalism is the sharing of equal opportunity. The common vice of socialism is the equal sharing of misery

    NRA Benefactor 2008

  8. #8
    Boolit Master

    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    State of Denial
    Posts
    4,212
    You'll for sure want to figure out (A.) the bore diameter, and (B.) the rate of twist. As mentioned, Winchester at least marketed the cartridge as a high velocity express round shooting lighter bullets with a slower twist. They are not a launch platform for 400 grainers! More like 260-275.

    One of our other UK members mentioned a requirement that your hunting bullets must be designed to expand. I don't know what criteria are being used to determine that. Ordinarily, I would tinker with harder alloys, large meplats on the nose, and plain bases for a cartridge like that, but if your hands are tied with softer metals, you might want to delve into gas checks.
    WWJMBD?

    In the Land of Oz, we cast with wheel weight and 2% Tin, Man.

  9. #9
    Boolit Master Eutectic's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Rocky Mountains
    Posts
    607
    Quote Originally Posted by sharps4590 View Post
    I got to wondering about them after I had been using open cell foam for several years so decided to pull some down and see what was going on in the case. I didn't like what I found. The cornmeal had nearly solidified and had to be dug out of the cases.
    Very smart sharps4590! Cornmeal, flour, Cream of Wheat, are all quite hygroscopic and will even pull moisture from the air. If used at all it should be the same day as loaded. I have went to either foam or granulated poly buffer for filler....finally even quiting Dacron. Way back..... some early gun writers recommended flour for buffering lead shotshells for waterfowl! Talk about seeing moisture! A Model 870 3" 12ga I heard of split the barrel with loads so loaded the prior season. These flour/cereal items make paste when wet....... and big trouble dried out.

    Eutectic

  10. #10
    Boolit Buddy georgewxxx's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    South Dakota
    Posts
    477
    If all you're trying to do by a filler is to hold the powder against the primer, sheets of quarter inch poly foam cut into 1 inch squares pushed into the case with a dowel will hold that powder in place even in the magazine while firing. I've used that for all my non case filling loads for 40 years.
    N.R.A. Life Member

  11. #11
    Boolit Grand Master


    missionary5155's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Last trip to Arequipa... till April.
    Posts
    7,133
    Good morning blokewatshoots and Welcome !
    As soon as I read your "handle", especially "bloke" the memories of working with a RTR (Royal Tank Regiment) in Germany in late 1973 came rushing up. Fine unit of dedicated "tankers"!
    Still have a pre 1899 Marlin but in 38-55 that gave us a terrible time slinging cast slugs all over the bern at 50 yards. Only loads that would shoot well were with BP and 40-1 255 grainers. Then tried the "corn meal" filler with 2400 and could go hunting with smokeless.
    Better solution with smokeless was and still is an oversized mold from the old NEI which drops a "range scrap" 263 grain slug at .384.

    Possibly the Handloader article is .40-72 and 405 WCF's Loads for the Winchester 1895 in Mag #295 April 2015 page 48. We shoot the 405 in a repro japchester so I was very interested to read this this article.
    Mike in Peru
    "Come unto Me, all you who labor and are heavy burdened, and I will give you rest." Matthew 11:28
    Male Guanaco out in dry lakebed at 10,800 feet south of Arequipa.

  12. #12
    Boolit Master
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    4,900
    Quote Originally Posted by blokewotshoots View Post
    Hi all
    This is my first post for help here on castboolits so if I’ve missed a previous thread on this subject please be kind enough to direct me there, I just don’t know the site well enough to have found it alone. Thanks

    My situation is that I’m about to take receipt of a cupboard queen. A virtually unused original 1903 1895 Marlin in 40-82 which according to the proof marks is one of the earlier examples proofed for nitro powders.

    The bore is in great condition if a little greyed with very strong rifling and no visual defects I could see with the borescope.

    Some of you may be of the opinion that I should preserve it as it is and I respect your right to hold that view.

    I am one of those who admire what our pioneering forefathers achieved with metallurgy and cartridge development during that transition period in firearms development to bring us the fabulous tools we enjoy today.

    I like to honour their work by using their works with care and respect and with the aim of maintaining it’s usefulness at a tool not an artefact.

    Have any of you guys taken a similar condition antique firearm back to a good shooting condition?

    When I’ve jumped through the legal hoops (I live in the UK) I eventually intend to work up some useful loads for the rifle with the eventual aim of using it as a highdays and holidays special event woodland stalker to bring her back to her original mission of food getter.

    I have yet to slug the bore so can’t give any details there but will do as soon as she arrives, I shoot a lot of cast bullets in my 444 1895, 357 1894 and Old Army, but nothing in .40 cal.

    Would anyone recommend to gas check or not to bring the bore back to life in the re break in period, this is new ground to me.

    Thanks for any help

    Ah, I've got mine - a .40-82 Winchester 1886, with a well-worn but not abused bore and exterior, but it has the excuse of being taken back to Norway by a returning immigrant, and being hidden under the floor of a mountain cabin during their occupation by gun control enthusiasts. I don't believe it was ever intended as a weapon of resistance, but it was more the principle of the thing.

    There is a book which for reloading and use of the Browning-designed lever Winchesters, leaves second-best nowhere. It is "The Winchester Lever Legacy" by Clyde Williamson. It is out of print, common but quite expensive on www.bookfinder.com , for it is an enormous book. Don't be fooled by its very folksy style, for most of it is about the most exhaustively documented load development programme available on any antique firearm, and Williamson, a farmer who didn't need deer tags, has done a lot of shooting at things besides cardboard and gongs.

    Colonel Brophy, in his "Marlin Firearms", gives a Marlin table of 1909 which lists the .40-82 bore dimensions as follows. It is tighter than Winchester's, and with rather shallow rifling, but the figures are totally accurate on my only Marlin, an 1892 .32 Long Rifle of about 1905.

    Bore .397in.
    Groove width .1247in.
    Land width .0831in.
    Groove depth .0025

    Unsurprisingly at that date, it is listed as hard steel, which presumably means nickel smokeless steel. (In an 1899 Winchester catalogue I have, they used that only for the 1894 and for the .45-70 Extra Light 1886, but it looked like it was coming for the others.) The twist is given as 20in. instead of the usual Winchester 28in. It is very unlikely that they went tighter than that, for in a lever-action rifle the cartridge overall length is limited by what will feed through the magazine. In the Winchester you get a rather nasty jam by going longer, and it is undesirable to have a cast bullet protruding past even that very slight bottleneck.

    When Winchester introduced a faster-twist, heavier-bullet version of the .40-82 (more often, I would guess, used in the 1885 Single Shot), they called it the .40-70, presumably to stop people coming back and saying "Your cartridges keep missing". I believe I argued this one onto our government's list of antique firearms, up to 1939, which are as freely ownable as a walking-stick as long as it isn't for use. Several cartridge books copy one another in getting its dimensions wrong. But it is simple a 40-82 with a slightly narrower shoulder (probably the dimension to which they actually were making the cartridge), and the shoulder a little steeper to give a longer neck for lube grooves.)

    I have an original Winchester mould, but it casts at 406in., while my grooves measure .409in. A medium-hard alloy should upset to seal the bore, if you can prevent gases from getting around the sides first. I think this is what that cornmeal was doing, for the result seems too good for adjusting the volumetric capacity to do it. I don't really think cornmeal is quite as great a safety consideration as some claim, in a nearly straight case, but it is enough to feel uneasy about, so I prefer a light filler. At least in the UK cigarette filter tips are (or then were) made from measured portions of kapok, which has less volume under pressure even than cotton. it works so well in life-jackets because the fibres are tubular. A felt wad with the edge rolled in melted lube, with a card wad behind it, should do what is good about cornmeal, the exclusion of gases. But I would prefer an eighth-inch of wax between two thin cards (the one between wax and bullet to stop it adhering.) You can make wax sheet by melting it on top of hot water and letting it go cold.

    I think it is important to avoid any hard and granular filler. Dr. Franklin Mann, in 1910, experimented with a sand filler behind the bullet. Eccentric I know, but presumable it was a condemned barrel, and he was trying to determine the effect of an air space, something inert made sense. The result was to tear off the case necks, which went downrange with the bullet. Presumably sand locks solid under impact, which would explain why dry sandbags stop a bullet in less distance than damp ones. Cork sheet might be good, and experiments with rubber bungs have been very alarming. For cork has the unusual characteristic of compressing one way without bulging out sideways.

    I modified a .310 RCBS mould made for Sharps rifles, by inserting hollowpoint pins which made a flat rather than a hollow, to shorten the nose, and riveting a plate onto the shortened rear to make a gas-check step, which is very useful if you want high velocities without the wax-sheet messing about. These are not weak actions. Williamson developed smokeless loads in the 1900 to 2100ft./sec. class, and was surprised to find them very close to the high velocity loads briefly manufactured by Winchester. I don't believe discontinuing them was because they were unsafe. It might have been to stop people trying to equal them with the smokeless powders of the time, which Winchester sternly warned were unpredictable, or perhaps just to sell people the 1894.

    Any load anybody tells you should only be approached by progressive working-up in your own rifle. My best results, sometimes a 5in. group at 100 yards, were obtained with 38gr, of Reloder 7, although Williamson recommends 29gr. of the faster 4198 for lead, and 50gr. of 3031 for jacketed. Deformation of the primer was very reassuring, and it was extruded by .005in. and not driven home again. The adhesion of case to chamber was bearing the pressure. So why do we need locking lugs? Well, suppose you have a wet or oily chamber, or some other complication I haven't thought of?

    Even rifles that can be owned freely must be entered on a licence for use, with a good reason given. In Scotland (where deer must logically be differently constructed from English ones), there is a legal requirement for a minimum velocity. I never actually tried for a deer with mine, but I got it agreed quite amicably by showing computer ballistics results indicating that it could be done with light .41 revolver bullets. Well so it could, I suppose.

    The Winchester's greatest weakness isn't a life-threatening one. The ejector (maybe in reaction to the even then obsolescent folded-head cases) is very large, extending to the firing-pin hole, so that it actually is part of the breech face. It has been known to break off, and is likely to permit loading and firing one shot before you notice. Williamson describes continuing use of a rifle in this condition, poking the cases out with a rod, but suppose again that you have a wet or oily chamber, or some other complication? The design was modified in the 1892, 1894 and most modern 1886 clones.
    Last edited by Ballistics in Scotland; 03-05-2018 at 11:52 AM.

  13. #13
    Boolit Master
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    4,900
    Quote Originally Posted by missionary5155 View Post
    As soon as I read your "handle", especially "bloke" the memories of working with a RTR (Royal Tank Regiment) in Germany in late 1973 came rushing up. Fine unit of dedicated "tankers
    Ah, I used to work in Kuwait with one of those, who reached the North American continent. On exercise in Canada in the Chieftain tank, he was too gentle a soul to ask his gunner if he was sure he put the shell in before the charge. The flash went four hundred yards - a first-class illustration of the effect of pressure on the burning rate, and the shell, with luck inert, lies buried in some corner of a foreign field that is forever England. They were afraid of having the cost of the charge stopped out of their pay.

  14. #14
    Boolit Mold
    Join Date
    Jan 2016
    Location
    Reno, NV
    Posts
    12
    I have an 1886 in 40-82 with a bore that slugs out to .408. It is one of my favorite rifles, but it took a bit of work to get her to shoot accurately. Good brass is mandatory. I start with 45-90 brass from Starline. It is very hard brass, and I anneal the necks before attempting any case forming operations. I size the cases in a Redding full length 40-82 die, backing out the case a couple of times, wiping excess lube off the shoulder of the case before fully forming the case. I then inside neck ream (yes the case has not been fire formed) with a .408 cutter from Forster. It is a custom cutter, but the wait time was only a few weeks for me. My bullet is from Buffalo Arms. I had previously tried to get accuracy from the current Lyman offering, 403169, and others without luck. The Buffalo Arms bullet drops at about 260 grains using soft range scrap lead. I size to .408 with RCBS green lube, mostly because I have so much of it. The gas check shank on the Buffalo Arms mould is reported to be cut for a Lyman check, which are no longer made. I have used the Sage gas check advertised as a duplicate of the Lyman check, with good luck. Buffalo also sells .41 caliber checks. I prime with a Winchester primer for my smokeless loads of 25 grains of 5744 and a Federal 215 for black powder loads. The smokeless load is mild and fire forms the brass well. My best accuracy and power is with black powder loads. I utilize a vegetable card wad cut from a 40 caliber punch. Throw your blackpowder through a long, (read very long) drop tube and compress the load with a compression die so that the base of the bullet just kisses the wad atop the powder column. I have had good luck with GOEX, your results may vary. I can hold a 2 inch group, often smaller, at 100 yards. I will be hunting this deer season with the rifle.

  15. #15
    Boolit Master
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Outside Rolla, Missouri
    Posts
    2,170
    Good read Malheur!! 5744 was not available all those years ago when I bought my 40-82. It never occurred to me to revisit the rifle and cartridge with that powder.

    As much as I love and shoot BP I never have pursued a BP load for a lever rifle. No doubt that's my loss but all I could think of was all that fouling falling into the action. Yet, I've owned several BP era lever rifles, my '86 in 40-82 included, and have never seen a corrosion problem within the action and we know those old rifles weren't stripped down every time they were used. I should probably re-think my reasoning.
    "In general, the art of government is to take as much money as possible from one class of citizens and give it to another class of citizens" Voltaire'

    The common virtue of capitalism is the sharing of equal opportunity. The common vice of socialism is the equal sharing of misery

    NRA Benefactor 2008

  16. #16
    Boolit Master Kev18's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Location
    Canada
    Posts
    1,393
    Been having trouble with 40-82 for years now. Cant get it to group. IM sure people reading this thread will recognize me, because I have done multiple threads myself about it. Believe me or not, what il say may come off as arrogant but its the truth. If someone didnt reload, never shot, never understood what that caliber is. Its almost useless reading what they wrote. Everything people said on here is 100% good advice for common calibers, but not for this one. People compare to 45-70 and how it performs. They think because they have 45-90's and 45-70's its the same, because both the cartridges resemble eachother, WRONG.

    I have talked to so many people for days and it's been useless, because they had no experience in the caliber. Others wrote stuff and they had experience, they previously reloaded for 40-82 and my rifle, and when I listened to them, my results improved.

    My words of wisdom for you are: It doesn't mean that a load that someone gave you will work for your rifle.
    I have notebooks full of loads, and PDF files filled with loads. I have been experimenting for years! So far my best results were with 34 grains 3031 and tp filler, but then again my grouping wasnt great. SO Today I reloaded with cornmeal.
    Try to read as many articles as possible! Knowledge is what you need. If you want something to read quickly, look at my thread in the leverguns category, called Chambering issues in my 1886. It has alot of useful info.

    I read alot of stuff people have been writing here and im picking on alot of stuff that didnt work for me. For me, for example someone wrote 35 grains of 3031. I just shot that two days ago and split 5/5 case mouths. But thats just me. Maybe you'll shoot good with 33 or 36 grains.

    If you take a load and try it, and it works. You are blessed. Good for you. I honestly hope it goes well because I spent so much money and time, and i still am. I need to go by more 301 this week, i ran out. And reading people's posts here, you can see for yourself that these cartridges are trial and error.
    Il be checking back here and seeing how it goes.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Abbreviations used in Reloading

BP Bronze Point IMR Improved Military Rifle PTD Pointed
BR Bench Rest M Magnum RN Round Nose
BT Boat Tail PL Power-Lokt SP Soft Point
C Compressed Charge PR Primer SPCL Soft Point "Core-Lokt"
HP Hollow Point PSPCL Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" C.O.L. Cartridge Overall Length
PSP Pointed Soft Point Spz Spitzer Point SBT Spitzer Boat Tail
LRN Lead Round Nose LWC Lead Wad Cutter LSWC Lead Semi Wad Cutter
GC Gas Check