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montana_charlie
05-13-2010, 05:48 PM
We have had a number of threads in which we discussed what it takes to make a chamber that is 'friendly' to paper patched bullets...as friendly as the old original chambers that were used by the Sharps factory.
Those chambers assumed the bullet would be patched to bore dimension, and were sized accordingly. But, they also provided a low-angle transition from the case to the 'throat'...and on into the rifling.

Yes, the old chambers can be duplicated in a newly cut barrel, but the threads examined modifications to SAMMI chambers intended for grease grooved bullets...which would remove some of their unfriendliness to the paper. Basically, the fix was to shave the 45 degree chamber step (transition at the case mouth) down to a gentler angle. 15 degrees and below have been considered, with five to seven degrees coming close to being ideal for patched-to-bore bullets.

I saw a recent reference to the 45 degree chamber step in a Pedersoli rifle being referred to as the 'leade'. Knowing that the actual leade angle in a Pedersoli is not 45 degrees, I opened an old email I have from Dick Trenk wherein he describes the current Pedersoli chamber...and it's 'throat'.

That's the first time I ever noticed that Pedersoli 'chamber steps' are NOT 45 degree angles. Instead, they are much closer to 10 degrees.
10 degrees, 12 minutes, and 14 seconds to be exact.

Wishing I could visualize such a topography, I'm hoping Tom Meyers can help out with one of his excellent drawings.
I have sent him the particulars...along with a rendering of the PGT bullet (for those interested in the 'correct' GG bullet for Pedersoli guns) and a Money bullet patched to groove diameter (because that's what I do, and it's my project).

Hoping he has time to draw this up...

CM

Gunlaker
05-13-2010, 06:20 PM
We have had a number of threads in which we discussed what it takes to make a chamber that is 'friendly' to paper patched bullets...as friendly as the old original chambers that were used by the Sharps factory.
Those chambers assumed the bullet would be patched to bore dimension, and were sized accordingly. But, they also provided a low-angle transition from the case to the 'throat'...and on into the rifling.

Yes, the old chambers can be duplicated in a newly cut barrel, but the threads examined modifications to SAMMI chambers intended for grease grooved bullets...which would remove some of their unfriendliness to the paper. Basically, the fix was to shave the 45 degree chamber step (transition at the case mouth) down to a gentler angle. 15 degrees and below have been considered, with five to seven degrees coming close to being ideal for patched-to-bore bullets.

I saw a recent reference to the 45 degree chamber step in a Pedersoli rifle being referred to as the 'leade'. Knowing that the actual leade angle in a Pedersoli is not 45 degrees, I opened an old email I have from Dick Trenk wherein he describes the current Pedersoli chamber...and it's 'throat'.

That's the first time I ever noticed that Pedersoli 'chamber steps' are NOT 45 degree angles. Instead, they are much closer to 10 degrees.
10 degrees, 12 minutes, and 14 seconds to be exact.

Wishing I could visualize such a topography, I'm hoping Tom Meyers can help out with one of his excellent drawings.
I have sent him the particulars...along with a rendering of the PGT bullet (for those interested in the 'correct' GG bullet for Pedersoli guns) and a Money bullet patched to groove diameter (because that's what I do, and it's my project).

Hoping he has time to draw this up...

CM

CM, One thing I don't recall ever reading was whether changing the 45 degree angle to a gentler one would be detrimental to grease groove bullets. If it is not, do you know the reason for the sharper angle in modern chambers?

I remember reading about a chamber design in one of Dan Thedore's rifles that apparently shot both grease grooves and "patched to groove" PP bullets with good accuracy. Now that sounds like a nice combo!

Chris.

Red River Rick
05-13-2010, 06:25 PM
45 degrees, 35 degrees, 25 degrees.................what ever. If the transitional step from the end of the case is too abrupt............your asking for trouble.

Does this look like a 10 degree, 12 minutes, and 14 second angle? And this is a un-modified Pedersoli chamber. I don't think so.

The other pic shows what the chamber should look like, before and after being modified if you want to shoot PP bullets without problems.

I tried patching to bore...............that didn't work worth $hit. My next step would be try patching to groove, and if that don't work..........then it's time to recut the throat/leade portion of the chamber and hope for the best.

RRR

Tom Myers
05-13-2010, 07:46 PM
I'll get started on drawing up the Pedersoli chamber in the morning.

I made a copy of the image of the chamber cast in Red River Rick's post, enlarged it and then used some screen caliper software to scale out the length of the step from the chamber mouth to the begining of the grooves. My crude estimation shows the step to be about 0.0745" in length.

The step angle is usually referred to as one half of the included angle formed by the cone of the step or, in other words, the angle formed by the slope of the step in relation to the axis of the bore.

If we assumbe that the chamber mouth measures 0.4815" and the Bore diameter is 0.4585 then the difference of the two is 0.023". Divide that by two and the rise from the groove radius to the chamber mouth radius is 0.0115"

Dividing the 0.0115" rise by the 0.0745" length of the step returns a ratio of 0.15436.

The ArcTangent of the ratio, 0.15436, is 8.775 degrees.
However I am assuming two measurements, so it is probably off somewhat.

(If you dont have a calculator that does Trig functions, for shalow angles of 10 degrees and under you can just multiply the ratio of rise and length by 57 to get a fairly close estimation of the angle.

Hope this helps.

P.S. The Image of the modified chamber was smaller and difficult to get a good scale on but it appears to have a step angle of about 3.5 degrees

montana_charlie
05-13-2010, 07:49 PM
CM, One thing I don't recall ever reading was whether changing the 45 degree angle to a gentler one would be detrimental to grease groove bullets.
As a matter of fact, the modification only affects the 'step'...not the chamber, or the rest of the 'throat' elements (freebore and leade) if it is not excessively long.

Therefore, it does not (or should not) degrade performance with grease grooved bullets.


Does this look like a 10 degree, 12 minutes, and 14 second angle?
Well, using a handy little helper called 'Screen Protractor', I took this screen shot with the protractor aligned as carefully as I could on the enlarged image.

It's 'close' to 10 degrees.

http://castboolits.gunloads.com/picture.php?albumid=88&pictureid=2308

It certainly isn't 45...

I think Kurt said his throater cuts a five degree angle on the step.

Here's a screen capture with the protractor on Kurts chamber cast.
Not counting alignment problems due to resolution and the cast not being perfectly horizontal, it does read 'close' to 5 degrees.

http://castboolits.gunloads.com/picture.php?albumid=88&pictureid=2309

I haven't had this Screen Protractor very long, and I'm still learning how to use it well.

CM

Red River Rick
05-13-2010, 08:20 PM
Okay, I'll re-phrase my comment..............................

The angle isn't 45 degrees, but whatever it is..................it ain't worth darn for P/Ping.

When I took the chamber cast, it measured 0.484", at the end of the case. The bore diameter in my rifle is 0.4480" and the groove diameter is 0.4605".

RRR

Lead pot
05-13-2010, 08:45 PM
Here is my chamber reamer specks for the cast Rick posted.
It is a compound lead of 5 degrees to groove depth than 2.5 degrees to the top of the lands.
This lead is friendly to a lubed bullet as well as the PP bullet.
This is as close to the original 1877 Sharps except for the 5 degree lead that I changed from a 3.5 degree. I did not want a very long lead.
I since had a throating reamer cut with a 4 degree for the .40-70 SS and used it in the .40-65 BPCR because it had a bad chamber from the factory and it turned out very good.

Kurt
http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b302/940Leadpot/Kurt44-90BN.jpg

montana_charlie
05-13-2010, 09:42 PM
The angle isn't 45 degrees, but whatever it is..................it ain't worth darn for P/Ping.
Disregarding the angle for a moment...how badly would you want PP to work for you?
Namely, would you be willing to wipe between shots?

That practice seemed so useless to me I used to swear I would never try PP if it was a requirement.
Do you feel that way, too?

CM

Red River Rick
05-13-2010, 10:19 PM
MC:

You know me. I'm currently NOT a target shooter like some of the other BP worshippers here, but I do hunt with BP.

To me, it doesn't matter weather I have to wipe between shots or blow tube it. As long as I can get decent accuracy with shooting PP, that'll make me happy.

So, Wiping or Blowing.......................what's it going to be?

RRR

Don McDowell
05-13-2010, 10:48 PM
Rick you can load a paper patch bullet with a lubed felt wad and not have to wipe between shots and still hold something between hunting and "target" accuracy. Powder charge plays a part, along with the lubed felt wad or grease cookie. Final wrapped diameter under bore size also helps, because most of the reason needed for wiping is the fouling left makes chambering almost impossible.

Alot of hoorah has been put forth about "special" paper patch chambers. While it's true that the gentle slope into the rifling of the old chambers was good, all one needs do is look at what Kenny W, Rick Mulhern, and others can achieve accuracy wise with box stock standard modern chambers.
I've got 1 italian rifle, and one C Sharps at the moment, and with the right combo of bullet diameter , powder charge,seating depth etc, they'll both shoot accurate enough to be competitive in matches and certainly have minute of antelope or elk to 300 yds.
If paper patching was simple, grease grooves, never would of made it obsolete and forgotten.

montana_charlie
05-13-2010, 11:06 PM
Well, if you're willing to wipe I'm certain groove diameter patching can be made to work in your rifle. It MAY even be possible to get reasonable performance without wiping, but I haven't gotten that far, yet, myself.

With your .484" chamber and .448" bore diameter, you should have an easy time of PP-ing at bore diameter if your cases had walls about .016" thick. But, you have about a quarter inch of groove diameter freebore between the chamber and the leade.

The bullet is going to bump up into that space no matter what, so it seems reasonable to just start at groove diameter to begin with. A .454" bullet (like you just made for me) patched to .460" should put you in business...since you are willing to wipe.

If your paper is pretty thick (like the 25% rag from BACO at .0023"), you might want a .452" bullet. In that event, I have a pretty good mould you can have to mess with. It was made by a guy who does a pretty good job on moulds...and I think your wife even knows him.

I've been seating that bullet .630 in the case mouth, but with your freebore you can probably seat it at about .390".

When Tom posts that chamber drawing, we'll see how close my 'supposing' fits in a Pedersoli.

CM

Lead pot
05-14-2010, 12:00 AM
I have several rifles with the tapered lead chamber and every one I can load and shoot with out using a wet patch or blow tube using a GG or PP bullet.
I spent time at the range to see just how many shots I can take with the .45-2.4 with out the tube and still hit what I was shooting at. No you will not get 2MOA with 50 rounds fired at 200 yards but it will be good enough that you will bust 6 bowling pins to splinters with most of the shots hitting them.
I know that I can with out a problem hitting the 600 yard stop sign at the Quigley with just a blow into the receiver now and then with using the lead you see on the cast above.
This can be done with the bullet that Rick posted or a postell at groove diameter or even a patched bullet 2-3 thousands over bore diameter. It's just the way you load your round. This can also be done with your normal 45° chamber end you get now days in most rifles but the lead rings or paper rings or lead fouled throat will give you a problem inserting a round sooner than later.
It's just easier in the old original chambers to make this work.
Look down the bore with a bore scope some day and you will see the same lead in the .22 rim fire rifle that is one they have not changed to the .45 degree yet.
The 45° came about the time the jacketed bullets and smokeless powder came around to help restrict the bullet some to get the smokeless powder to work more efficiently I think, but that is just my thought on this.

Kurt

Red River Rick
05-14-2010, 02:02 AM
Okay Gents. :veryconfu



Powder charge plays a part, along with the lubed felt wad or grease cookie.

That's one part of the equation I've never tried.

Alot of hoorah has been put forth about "special" paper patch chambers. While it's true that the gentle slope into the rifling of the old chambers was good, all one needs do is look at what Kenny W, Rick Mulhern, and others can achieve accuracy wise with box stock standard modern chambers.

Mr. M's 50, "The Bastard" (I like that name) has a custom barrel. Is his chamber of standard configuration or did Shiloh cut his something different? What about Mr.W., are all the chamber configurations in his rifles standard as well?

I've got 1 italian rifle, and one C Sharps at the moment, and with the right combo of bullet diameter , powder charge,seating depth etc, they'll both shoot accurate enough to be competitive in matches and certainly have minute of antelope or elk to 300 yds.

Don, the minute of antelope doesn't help me much up here, we don't have any speed goats. But minute of moose................well that's different!

If paper patching was simple, grease grooves, never would of made it obsolete and forgotten.

I figured that everyone just got lazy in the past 100 years and switched to greasers.



With your .484" chamber and .448" bore diameter, you should have an easy time of PP-ing at bore diameter if your cases had walls about .016" thick.

Another factor in this ever changing game. Yes, thicker brass would help considerably. If my memory is right, I think Mr. M and Powderburnerr are using RMC thick walled brass, some where around 0.017" thick.

The bullet is going to bump up into that space no matter what, so it seems reasonable to just start at groove diameter to begin with. A .454" bullet (like you just made for me) patched to .460" should put you in business...since you are willing to wipe.

If your paper is pretty thick (like the 25% rag from BACO at .0023"), you might want a .452" bullet. In that event, I have a pretty good mould you can have to mess with. It was made by a guy who does a pretty good job on moulds...and I think your wife even knows him.

Ha! You Funny Guy Chalie!

I've been seating that bullet .630 in the case mouth, but with your freebore you can probably seat it at about .390".

When Tom posts that chamber drawing, we'll see how close my 'supposing' fits in a Pedersoli.

Good Plan! I'm just as curious as you are!


CM

RRR

Don McDowell
05-14-2010, 09:42 AM
Mulherns chambers are standard chambers , unless he modified them for paper patching, something I've not heard or seen him say.
Wasserburgers chamber on his old rifle is standard. Not sure about Dora.

Get some cerrosafe and do a chamber cast. All the drawings in the world won't tell you what the reamer that got crammed up that barrels snout actually looked like. Chamber drawings are good for what might be, but they're worthless for what is..http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f358/Ranch137/shortyppatch08.jpg

RMulhern
05-14-2010, 09:58 AM
Guys

Both of my Shiloh .45/110 rifles are just that.....Shiloh factory barrels! No custom chambering to my knowledge!!

'THE BASTARD'.....which shoots FANTASTIC with PP.....is a C. Sharps rifle aka stock chamber!!

Don McDowell
05-14-2010, 10:07 AM
Guys

Both of my Shiloh .45/110 rifles are just that.....Shiloh factory barrels! No custom chambering to my knowledge!!

'THE BASTARD'.....which shoots FANTASTIC with PP.....is a C. Sharps rifle aka stock chamber!!

So there it is in black and white, its not making a chamber friendly to paper patched bullets, it's making paper patched bullets friendly to the chamber.:drinks:

Kenny Wasserburger
05-14-2010, 11:08 AM
Stock Chambers, vrs special chambers
My Shilohs,
Current size chambers are .482 at the Mouth. My old rifle is .480 and when it was rebarreled in 2005 used the same old chamber size. Dora also was cut with with this old chamber Reamer. Both are stock barrels with old stock chambers.

I always get " I have handloaded for years I know what I am doing", Very seldom do they know what they are doing. [smilie=b: Matching the bullet to the bore is a pretty stright forward process, in my opinion, if one is willing to wipe between shots you can shoot exceptional accuracy. I posted before that you can have the very best quailty barrels, yet if its a lousy chamber you wont shoot well. Very few people know how to control fouling well, either, last match I attended was proof enough for me. One good friend was having leading issues with his 45-110 Shiloh and shooting GG bullets, Too much wipping!!! I had him cut back to one single damp patch, (same I was using) for my GG loads on Sunday.

He took 3rd in the Long Range at Alliance.

I have had my moments in Matches where crashed and burned hard. I learn from these, dont give up, Phoenix in 08 was a good example.

End results, 09 in Phoenix was a good example of learning from and impoving.


2010 Phoenix, shot a 245-1x the first day of the cup, with no spotter using the heavy gun and Paper Patch.

KW

Gunlaker
05-14-2010, 11:44 AM
I always get " I have handloaded for years I know what I am doing", Very seldom do they know what they are doing. [smilie=b:
KW

That's a fact.

I thought I knew what I was doing when I got into this BPCR stuff. I've been at it only a bit longer than a year now. I like to think I'm a quick learner, but mostly I've learned that there is a lot to learn yet :grin:

Seems that the two biggest things I've learned are:

1) even though I thought I was good at producing consistent loads I wasn't. Consistency has a whole new meaning.

2) shooting technique really matters with these rifles. The learning curve here is at least as steep, if not more, than making consistent loads. I'm not sure about long distance, but it's certainly true for the 200m shoots I attend.

Chris.

RMulhern
05-14-2010, 11:50 AM
Someone may have a load that shoots like JESUS CHRIST was at the trigger from 200 to 300 yards/meters...what have you.....but until it's tested at LONG RANGE.....it may not hit 'diddly-squat' at 800 to 1000!! But if 300 is all you're gonna shoot......doesn't make much difference!!

Tom Myers
05-14-2010, 12:24 PM
I finished up the drawings.
Some of the drawings are quite large - 1 pixel to 1/1000 of and inch, so I will just provide links to the web page where they are stored.

Don said it right. drawings of chamber and load fit are worthless unless they are constructed with real, accurate measured dimensional values.

If drawn to accurate, measured scale dimensions and large enough, a lot of insight may be gained into designing and loading for proper throat-leade fit.

Hope this helps.

DT Design Paper Patch Bullet
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/DT%20Design%20460-454-PP-40%25.gif

Pedersoli-Gunn-Trenk bullet from a Victory Mold
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/Pedersoli_45-500_40%25.gif

Paper Patch loaded to lands in Pedersoli Chamber
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Barrel-275_45-70_Govt_45-40-570-PP.gif

Pedersoli Victory Mold in the Pedersoli Chamber
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Barrel-275_45-70_Govt._W-W_27545-500.gif

Throat fit of the Paper Patch Bullet
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~DT_Design_460-454-57-PP.Jpg


Throat fit of the Pedersoli-Gunn-Trenk Bullet
http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Pedersoli_45-500.Jpg


Full Size Pedersoli Chamber Drawing (http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Barrel.gif)

Full Size Loaded Paper Patched Bullet Drawing (http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Barrel_45-70_Govt._W-W_DT_Design_45-40-570-PP.Jpg)

Full Size Loaded Pedersoli-Gunn-Trenk Bullet Drawing (http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~Barrel_45-70_Govt._W-W_Pedersoli_45-500_Rot.Jpg)

50% Paper Patch Load Drawing (http://www.tmtpages.com/LinkSkyImages/forum_images/CM%20Pedersoli%2045-70/45-70_Govt._Pedersoli~DT_Design_45-40-500-PP.Jpg)

Lead pot
05-14-2010, 01:16 PM
Someone may have a load that shoots like JESUS CHRIST was at the trigger from 200 to 300 yards/meters...what have you.....but until it's tested at LONG RANGE.....it may not hit 'diddly-squat' at 800 to 1000!! But if 300 is all you're gonna shoot......doesn't make much difference!!

Well I don't know how a Jesus Christ load shoots but I took a .44 load that shot very good out to 200 yards to Alliance and shot it for two days before the match and found that load started to have problems on the 500 yard target no mater what I used for fouling control, blow tube, one wet one dry, two wet and dry one damp with out a dry :shock:well that pulled the neck off the case.
Took several PP loads to Orville's range and found that long nosed bullet just would not hold past 400 yards.
I have two .44-90 BN chambered rifles one with the tapered lead and one with the 45 degree, one shot very good and the other shot good using the lubed bullet and PP bullet, like I have said many times--both chambers will work good, but now both of my .44's have the tapered lead.
I now have a reamer in the works with a original Remington chamber design with a long tapered lead for a .44-100 Remington chamber.
:bigsmyl2: By the way Don, I could not have that reamer ground with out some sort of drawing:bigsmyl2:

Don McDowell
05-14-2010, 02:37 PM
:D Kurt that's what I said the drawings are all fine and dandy and necessary before you get the reamer and stick it into the barrel.
But once that barrel has already been done, the rifle is boxed up sent out and picked up from the dealer, what the drawing shows means little. What the cerrosafe says tells you exactly what you've got to work with.;)

From what I've been able to determine if a person is going to shoot patched to groove diameter, the diameter of the bullet itself can't exceed bore diameter. Ie if you want a half a chance of making bullets patched to groove in a 458 barrel, the slug itself needs be no larger than .450 and probably tapered so the base is the only thing measuring .450.

I do think that 5* lead you use is a very good idea, as I've seen what it can do with both naked and patched bullets. But at the same time I also see what happens with my rifle's and their standard chambers and others.
Got's to work with what the rifle fairy brung ya.:drinks:

montana_charlie
05-14-2010, 02:37 PM
Thanks for those drawings, Tom. Excellent work...

Tom made the chamber drawings from a set of numbers supplied by the Pedersoli factory. They are the specs the factory uses to cut their reamers.
We can assume Tom's drawings depict a 'normal' Pedersoli chamber since the overall shape closely approximates the chamber cast posted earlier by Rick...except for one thing.
I don't see a long freebore in Rick's chamber cast.
Rick, was that taken from your rolling block...or your Sharps?

If a 'gentle' chamber step is the 'good idea' for PP that Kurt and Orville Loomis say it is, the factory chamber from Pedersoli comes very close to duplicating what they have cut in their guns...while still being a proper chamber for GG bullets.
The difference between this and theirs is the presence of the (longish) freebore.

I don't know what Orville has, but Kurt's drawing shows he has no freebore. The 5 degree 'transition' connects directly to the 2.5 degree 'leade'.

With the freebore being present, it allows the bullet to seat out further...allowing a bigger powder charge.


Getting off of the Paper Patch theme for a moment...notice how well the PGT bullet fits the Pedersoli 'throat'.

Tom had the Pedersoli specs for the chamber. He got the bullet specs from Dr. Gunn's drawing on the BPCR.net website.
When he 'married' the two sets of numbers...they matched beautifully.

Two driving bands exactly bridge the freebore (good for alignment), the nose nestles perfectly in the leade cone angle (good for alignment), and there is a grease groove right over the 'chamber step'...which is good for preventing leading at that spot if the brass case is a little shorter than the chamber.

If 'bullet fit' is as vital as everybody says, any Pedersoli owner who doesn't try the PGT is probably overlooking the best GG choice for his rifle.

Back to Paper Patch...the bullet shown is my patched-to-groove Money bullet package.
You can decide for yourself if it looks like a good fit for that shooting style, or if patched-to-bore seems more reasonable to you.
I started with a .450" bullet, migrated to .452"...and have now settled on .454" as being the best fit in my rifle with the paper I am using.

I have photos which prove that patching to groove can be made to produce a pristine bullet leaving the muzzle. From that point on, it all depends on load development to find the accuracy which that bullet design and rifle are capable of.

A tip for any who are just beginning to consider paper patching...
Establish your paper supply first. Then decide what the diameter of your bullet needs to be to make that paper work in your barrel dimensions.

Back when I first received the specs for Pedersoli chambers, I was about to have a 45/70 converted to 45/90. I knew at the time of the PGT bullet, and I wanted to know whose reamer most closely resembled the Pedersoli shape. None of them did, and I wasn't up (back then) for having a custom reamer made.
So, (sadly) I settled for a rather 'standard' throat shape.

But, when looking at those numbers, I was only interested in the 'throat'. I didn't know what a chamber step was...and wouldn't have cared if a step could be 'friendly' to paper patched bullets. But, a recent reading of that old email caused the 'step angle' to catch my eye...due to the discussions during the last year, or so.

I started this thread to explore the possibility that a factory Pedersoli chamber might already have a PP friendly shape...as defined by the experiments of Kurt and Orville when duplicating the 'friendly elements' of antique chambers.

I would say that it turns out to be true...

CM

45 2.1
05-14-2010, 03:08 PM
Charlie-
Have you, or anyone else for that matter, considered patching a base band boolit that matched the case, throat taper and lands of your barrel taking into account the paper thickness along with the required fouling thickness? It would be easy to do with a swaging die. You would get the entire bearing surface properly aligned so no part would bump anymore than necessary.

Don McDowell
05-14-2010, 03:13 PM
Rcbs's paper patch bullet is much that way. Several of the custom makers offer a bullet with such a taper.

montana_charlie
05-14-2010, 04:02 PM
Charlie-
Have you, or anyone else for that matter, considered patching a base band boolit that matched the case, throat taper and lands of your barrel taking into account the paper thickness along with the required fouling thickness?
Well, I was aware of the existence of tapered bullets when I first started to consider PP-ing.

Reading about what other (successful) shooters were doing, and considering the bullet designs available, I made a choice for 'parallel sides'.
I didn't want to take on the problem of shaping a patch which rolls smoothly onto a 'cone'...rather than a 'cylinder'.

I took the easy way...and messed with it until it worked.
CM

Red River Rick
05-14-2010, 04:04 PM
Tom:

Thanks for taking the time and making up the drawings, it's very much appreciatted.

No doubt, everything matches up perfecty...........................on paper. But the reality is, what if your chamber isn't like the one depicted?

I happened to have a few of PGT bullets MC sent me last year, I tried them in my Pedersoli Competition (45-90) and they worked OK. However; in my Pedersoli RB (45-70), they don't fit.

Unlike the drawings Tom posted, and by looking at the pic of the chamber cast I posted, my chamber has no "Feebore". And what little "Leade" there is, is only about 0.120". So, not all Pedersoli chambers are alike. Like Don mentioned, making a chamber cast is about the only correct way to gauge.

The pic below shows the PGT bullet seated into one of my 45-70 cases. In order for me to get the darn thing chambered, I have to seat that bullet below the first driving band. Which equates to approx 0.750" in depth. And even then, I had to push the round into the chamber.

That's double the amount I have to seat the Dixie/Lyman Bore-Rider Greaser.

???????????? :killingpc

RRR

Red River Rick
05-14-2010, 04:07 PM
Rcbs's paper patch bullet is much that way. Several of the custom makers offer a bullet with such a taper.

Dual-Diameter bullets have been around for a long time. If I recall correctly, mind you I could be wrong as well, the Peabody used a dual-diameter bullet.

I have a set of swaging die to make 0.403" - 0.411" dual diameter "J" bullets.

RRR

Lead pot
05-14-2010, 05:31 PM
My first reproduction Sharps was a pedersoli Quigley from back when they first sold in Cabela's. It had a chamber like Tom has drawn up except it had the 45 degree chamber end and a long cylinder "free bore" than the lead( I call everything from the case mouth forward to the top of the land the lead and the only way to get that rifle to shoot right was using a PP bullet patched to groove diameter or use a GG bullet that has no "bore riding step" or knurled bullets .460 diameter. Bullets like these swaged bullets below.
I looked at a new Pedersoli through a bore scope and it looked like the photo Charlie posted so I think they mad a change down the line.

http://i704.photobucket.com/albums/ww43/Kurtalt/IMG_0226-2.jpg

montana_charlie
05-14-2010, 07:05 PM
I happened to have a few of PGT bullets MC sent me last year, I tried them in my Pedersoli Competition (45-90) and they worked OK. However; in my Pedersoli RB (45-70), they don't fit.
I bet if your rolling block had been made after 2000, the PGT would fit.

Back when I was looking for a Sharps to buy, I had decided to get a Pedersoli. So, I had 'made contact' with Dick Trenk and Lee Shaver to be able to learn as many tidbits as they might be able to pass on.

When it became obvious that I would probably buy a used rifle, I asked one of them (don't remember which) if there had been any 'evolution' in the Sharps barrels...which might make it advisable to be careful of when a rifle had been manufactured.

The answer was yes...there had been some changes from the original barrels. I was advised (in 2005) that any rifle made after 2000 would have the 'current' configuration.
It was during that same period that I got the specs from Dick Trenk which Tom used for the diagrams.

So, I believe the diagrams depict the barrel which was being made between 2000 and 2005...and I think they have stayed with that configuration because it works so well.

Just out of curiosity, I would like to see a chamber cast from a recently built (year-old) Pedersoli Sharps.

CM

Red River Rick
05-15-2010, 04:39 PM
I bet if your rolling block had been made after 2000, the PGT would fit.




Charlie:

Your probably right. When I checked with Gloria at Pedersoli, the records indicate that my rifle was made in 85' and shipped to RUKO of Canada. I thought it was made a lot earlier.





Just out of curiosity, I would like to see a chamber cast from a recently built (year-old) Pedersoli Sharps.




My Pedersoli (S 796-459) chambered for 45-90 was bought new in 08". I'm not sure it was made in 08', but it's about as new as I can get my hands on.

I'll try to do a chamber cast of it, within the next few days, and we'll see what it's "Throat" is like.

RRR

montana_charlie
05-15-2010, 05:14 PM
My Pedersoli (S 796-459) chambered for 45-90 was bought new in 98". I'm not sure it was made in 98', but it's about as new as I can get my hands on.
Did you confirm it's manufacture date with Gloria?

I didn't get interested in Sharps guns until (about) 2005. At that time, the S.795 and S.796 were not on the Pedersoli website, but they did show the (old) "Long Range Target" models with the half-round barrels.

My recollection has the the 'Competition' guns first showing up on the website...and shipping to dealers...around 2006 - 2007. I was paying attention because I sure wished I had one.

1998 sounds unlikely to me but I could believe 2008.
Gloria would know the real skinny...

CM

Red River Rick
05-15-2010, 05:27 PM
Charlie:

My mistake, it should be 08' and not 98'.


RRR

montana_charlie
05-16-2010, 11:23 PM
Since I don't have a Pedersoli chamber in my Pedersoli rifle, I wanted to see a 'picture' of how my loaded cartridge lays in the chamber I do have. So, I began with Tom's drawing, and started manipulating the elements to agree with what I use.

The case is now a 'stretched' 45/90 which fits a 2.410" chamber, cut in one of the standard SAMMI configurations.
The patched-to groove Money bullet is seated to a point .670" below the case mouth.
The length of the patch (including the base fold) is .870", and extends a bit forward of the ogive, because I use (too soft) 20-1 alloy.

With the 'Screen Calipers' software properly calibrated, I built this image to a point where everything is accurate to within a thousandth, or so.

If I were going to use this bullet in the Pedersoli factory chamber, I would reduce the seating depth to .534"...with no other change.

http://i684.photobucket.com/albums/vv203/montana_charlie/MyPPLoad.jpg

Thanks for the 'material' to work with, Tom.

CM

45 2.1
05-19-2010, 07:28 AM
Charlie- Have you considered patching a base band boolit


Rcbs's paper patch bullet is much that way. Several of the custom makers offer a bullet with such a taper. They are not tapered........


Well, I was aware of the existence of tapered bullets when I first started to consider PP-ing.
CM
They are not tapered........


Dual-Diameter bullets have been around for a long time. If I recall correctly, mind you I could be wrong as well, the Peabody used a dual-diameter bullet.
They are dual diameter, but the base has a groove size band about 0.08 to 0.012" long dependent on caliber. The idea is about 100 years old at least.

I have a set of swaging die to make 0.403" - 0.411" dual diameter "J" bullets. RRR This would work fine, the swaging die that is.

Don McDowell
05-19-2010, 09:43 AM
45 2.1 ? Do you mean just the RCBS bullet? As I know of several different moulds that throw a .450 base with a lot of taper that folks are using for patched to groove.

45 2.1
05-19-2010, 09:56 AM
45 2.1 ? Do you mean just the RCBS bullet? As I know of several different moulds that throw a .450 base with a lot of taper that folks are using for patched to groove.

No, a base band bullet is a two diameter bullet. For a bullet, it would have a groove diameter base with the body the same size going forward perhaps 0.12" then a mild taper (somewhat close to whats in the rifles throat) to a bore diameter section till you get to the nose (all of this would be suitably smaller so a patch brings it up to the proper size to load for a boolit).