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Nosler Partitionin a 243

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11 comments

  • gunnut505
    Which manual, and what year?
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  • 62fuelie
    Probably the longer bearing surface of the partition bullet may be enough to raise pressures higher than desired.
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  • perry shooter
    Federal Loads that exact bullet in one variation of ammo I have been using it for over 30 years in Valmet Model and 115 grain in 25-06 Both have never failed me.
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  • Colonel Plink
    quote:Originally posted by gunnut505
    Which manual, and what year?


    It's an older (mebbe 10 years) Speer #13.

    quote:Originally posted by 62fuelie
    Probably the longer bearing surface of the partition bullet may be enough to raise pressures higher than desired.
    That makes sense. I also wondered if the jacket not covering the base of the bullet might cause it to open up slightly like the old style soft lead bullets. I know, long shot, but it had occurred to me.
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  • navc130
    What they are probably saying, is that caliber reload, with that bullet caused excessive pressure in their labratory testing. Reason unknown or not reported.
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  • Mobuck
    I would agree that the possibility of the longer bearing surface plus the open base causing increased pressure is real. At the time the manual was published, the .243 100 grain partition was the smallest caliber produced. It's quite possible that softer jacket material had to be used to allow proper extrusion/swaging of the jacket. In addition, the 243 Win with a 100 grain bullet has a lot of bullet inside the case. If pressure caused the base of the bullet to swell while still inside the case, things could get ugly very quick.
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  • 243winxb
    Two cores separated by a bulkhead (partition). The bulkhead being thicker/harder than lead will raise pressure when compaired to a conventionallead core. nosler_partition.jpg This should apply to all cartridges, not just the 243 win.
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  • Colonel Plink
    Thanks for all the replies. There's a world of knowledge running around this place[:)]
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  • laylandad
    What page are you on? I have looked and am not seeing this warning. I load both the 100gr Speer BTSP and Nosler Partition's. Just wondering if I should alter my loading procedures.


    It's an older (mebbe 10 years) Speer #13.

    quote:Originally posted by 62fuelie
    Probably the longer bearing surface of the partition bullet may be enough to raise pressures higher than desired.
    That makes sense. I also wondered if the jacket not covering the base of the bullet might cause it to open up slightly like the old style soft lead bullets. I know, long shot, but it had occurred to me.
    [/quote]
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  • Colonel Plink
    quote:Originally posted by laylandad
    What page are you on? I have looked and am not seeing this warning. I load both the 100gr Speer BTSP and Nosler Partition's. Just wondering if I should alter my loading procedures.



    page 174. I just looked at it again and it actually says to NOT use Boattails with the Partition data. Now I'm wondering if I just read it wrong... dunno. I don't have any such warning in the Lee book I have.
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  • RCrosby
    Are we dealing with the earlier Noslers that had "relief groove" turned adjacent to the internal partition? Just wondering if that might be a factor???
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