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Unread 01-22-2014, 03:36 PM   #21
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Default Bingo 7:30pm Thursday at the fire hall

I turned down another 1/2" x 20tpi SHCS to an expanding ram...It ended up .319"...With a slight taper for belling the case mouth...Seems to work pretty well...

...But I'm still thinking about Bingo...
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Unread 01-22-2014, 05:44 PM   #22
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I believe that you are going in the correct direction with making a new expander/belling ram. I ran into a similar situation when I started handloading for the 30 Luger some years ago. My original die set (Lee 3 die set) would not function for me at all. The sizer die would not size the neck down sufficiently to give me any neck tension on .308in. bullets.

At first I thought it was that the expander/powder funnel was too large below the belling area, but that was not it. Anyway, I purchased an RCBS 30 Luger sizing die, then reduced the Dillon expander/ powder through die by .002in. and got sufficient neck tension on these .308in. bullets. I had to machine .040in. off of the base of the Dillon expander/powder die so that it would sit lower and give me enough belling for the case mouth. It works great also on the .309 and .311in. lead bullets. It surely had me scratching my head for a while.........bingo was looking good!!


Out of the 3 dies in the Lee set, I am using only the seating die. We live and hopefully learn.
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Unread 01-22-2014, 06:21 PM   #23
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At first I thought it was that the expander/powder funnel was too large below the belling area...I had to machine .040in. off of the base of the Dillon expander/powder die...
I'm confused (and bewitched, bothered, and bewildered but that's another story) about what a 'powder funnel' die is...Is this for some kind of progressive loading press, with multiple stations that revolve with each pump of the handle (or maybe motorized)???

I only tried progressive loading once, and discarded the idea forever. (I had a 6-station press but the turret was too wobbly; I had to shim the rear with a feeler gauge to keep it from cocking at an angle when you cranked the ram up/down...I think it may have been an RCBS turret press but I can no longer remember...) I don't like the idea of cranking out a round with every pump. I'd rather do 50 de-primes at a time; then size those 50; then prime the 50; then charge the 50; and finally seat the 50 bullets...I'll even run 5 or 10 through all the steps and shoot them off to make sure I've got everything right...I especially like a 50 rd loading tray to charge the primed cases 50 at a time...And look in and see if I have a double charge, or a half charge, before I seat the bullets...

On Lee dies, when I first started reloading, I once had a set that had the plating flaking off...
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Unread 01-24-2014, 08:20 PM   #24
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I primed several cases and charged them with 3.5gr of Red Dot. Bullet seated to an OAL of 1.244". Ready to try them out...

I may not try any more until I get another set of springs from Wolff...(see other thread)...
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Unread 01-24-2014, 11:56 PM   #25
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I primed several cases and charged them with 3.5gr of Red Dot. Bullet seated to an OAL of 1.244". Ready to try them out...

I may not try any more until I get another set of springs from Wolff...(see other thread)...
Hi,

Where did you get your O.A.L. figure, as it should mirror an original Japanese round, somewhat.

Nambus are not as touchy as Lugers when it comes to O.A.L., thank the slightly straighter grip angle for that.

Good luck, and do replace your springs with a fresh set of Wollf springs, as the metal in the Japanese springs is inferior.

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Unread 01-25-2014, 12:16 AM   #26
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Where did you get your O.A.L. figure, as it should mirror an original Japanese round, somewhat.
From an original Japanese 8mm Nambu cartridge provided by Ed Tinker, and from data listed in Handloaders Manual Of Cartridge Conversions. 1.244" was the same in each case. Cartridges Of The World has it listed as 1.25"...Close enough.

Quote:
Good luck, and do replace your springs with a fresh set of Wollf springs, as the metal in the Japanese springs is inferior.
Actually, my test showed no practical difference in the Nambu springs and the Wolff replacement springs.

I have no confidence in the Wolff replacement 'standard' springs which I received, as I commented on in my other Nambu thread. I placed an order tonight for their 'extra power' Nambu springs, which I'll test as I did their 'standard' replacement springs.

************************************************************************ ***********
In other news...

I had also emailed both RCBS and Lyman about different questions I had about their products. Lyman has not answered me about that #32362 bullet, but a CS tech at RCBS emailed me that they will send me out a replacement "expander/decap unit" for my #36404 die set...I had asked for the instruction sheet and explained that my expander was oversize for the Huntingtom .321" FMJ bullets...
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Unread 01-25-2014, 01:10 AM   #27
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I primed several cases and charged them with 3.5gr of Red Dot. Bullet seated to an OAL of 1.244". Ready to try them out...

I may not try any more until I get another set of springs from Wolff...(see other thread)...
Hi,

Then given a similar bullet nose contour, you should have a good starting place for continued A.O.L. experimentation.

Please also note that the Japanese were known to prefer short ogive bullets, leaving more of the bullet to actually ride on the lands. This was particularly so with their Arisaka rifles, the T-38 being, in my opinion, a simplification, yet refinement, of the Mauser action design.

Some golden daybreak, I'd like to design a truncated cone bullet for the 8mm Nambu, probably starting off with the DWM truncated cone for the 7.65 Parabellum as my guide.

Really, the 8mm Nambu and the 7.65 Parabellum both suffer from not having a decent selection of well designed bullets available to the handloader.

Regarding your powder, as soon as you get your feet wet with your new cases, I'd switch to the same True Blue powder you found so helpful in solving your 9mm problems, as the bottleneck cases should react particularly well to a slower powder.

Some fine day, when we can actually buy powder again, I'd like to experiment with the newer medium-slow/slow-slow powders to see if any of them are worth a hoot accuracy wise in the 9mm Parabellum pistol. Perhaps I'll be surprised, perhaps not, but the fun is in the experimentation and refinement of the various powders and other component parts of a load, always seeking that last little bit of perfection.

If you have the time to measure it, would you please give me the actual length of Ed's original Japanese bullet.

Thanks!


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Unread 01-25-2014, 10:14 AM   #28
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Regarding your powder, as soon as you get your feet wet with your new cases, I'd switch to the same True Blue powder you found so helpful in solving your 9mm problems...
I haven't had any 9mm problems...I don't use True Blue (never even heard of it)...

Only problem I have had in the last year is getting powder...And primers...

Quote:
If you have the time to measure it, would you please give me the actual length of Ed's original Japanese bullet.
As stated above, it is 1.244"...A rare instance of a book value being right on the actual value...
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Unread 01-25-2014, 10:44 AM   #29
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Please also note that the Japanese were known to prefer short ogive bullets, leaving more of the bullet to actually ride on the lands.
Here's a comparison of the two Nambu cartridges I have plus my conversion (pic attached)...

The lead-bulleted cartridge is headstamped 'W C C 6 6' and was bought from a cartridge collector at a gun show in the late 70's/early 80's for $1.00...Ed's cartridge has no markings...Mine is the 40 S&W conversion...

Lead - .407" rim .376" base .844" case 1.240" OAL .320" bullet
Ed's - .412" rim .411" base .861" case 1.244" OAL .320" bullet
Mine - .413" rim .410" base .866" case 1.246" OAL .321" bullet

The lead-bulleted cartridge has a pronounced semi-rimmed configuration...I have no idea what it actually is (original case)...I am measuring the bullet at the case mouth, it may be larger inside the neck...
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Unread 01-25-2014, 07:32 PM   #30
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I'm confused (and bewitched, bothered, and bewildered but that's another story) about what a 'powder funnel' die is...Is this for some kind of progressive loading press, with multiple stations that revolve with each pump of the handle (or maybe motorized)??
Sorry that I wasn't very clear on my description of things. Yes, I am loading my 30 Luger brass on a Dillon 650 progressive press. At station 2(after sizing and priming) the powder funnel enlarges the case neck and bells the case mouth, along with adding the powder charge. At station 3, the powder check die checks for the correct amount of powder in the case. Then on to seating and crimping. A total of 5 stations in all. It is a self indexing press.
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Unread 01-26-2014, 03:08 AM   #31
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Here's a comparison of the two Nambu cartridges I have plus my conversion (pic attached)...

The lead-bulleted cartridge is headstamped 'W C C 6 6' and was bought from a cartridge collector at a gun show in the late 70's/early 80's for $1.00...Ed's cartridge has no markings...Mine is the 40 S&W conversion...

Lead - .407" rim .376" base .844" case 1.240" OAL .320" bullet
Ed's - .412" rim .411" base .861" case 1.244" OAL .320" bullet
Mine - .413" rim .410" base .866" case 1.246" OAL .321" bullet

The lead-bulleted cartridge has a pronounced semi-rimmed configuration...I have no idea what it actually is (original case)...I am measuring the bullet at the case mouth, it may be larger inside the neck...
Hi,

It might just be an optical, but it looks like the thickness of your rim base is substantially thicker than Ed's original. This causes the extractor damage mentioned previously. What is the original rim base thickness? What is your rim base thickness?

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Unread 01-26-2014, 03:11 AM   #32
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I haven't had any 9mm problems...I don't use True Blue (never even heard of it)...

Only problem I have had in the last year is getting powder...And primers...



As stated above, it is 1.244"...A rare instance of a book value being right on the actual value...
Hi,

I was looking for the bullet length, not the cartridge O.A.L.

My comments regarding powder selection above are still on exact point; though brainfarted in from another thread. Frankly, I'd be surprised if you get accurate groups out of Red Dot in this case and caliber, though I'm sure the pistol will function properly with the correct charge.

Please note that both the Nambu pistol and Arisaka rifle use the old British style Medford rifling: shallow, wide and with grooves usually oversized. This means that you can use oversized diameter bullets and still get away with it. .323 lead bullets are often used in the Nambu pistol, and quite successfully. Also note that when compared to a Luger, for instance, the Nambu has quite a bit of free bore built into its chambering.

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Unread 01-26-2014, 10:11 AM   #33
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Hi,

It might just be an optical, but it looks like the thickness of your rim base is substantially thicker than Ed's original
Yes, it's an optical illusion. The case is tilted slightly away (you can see the primer if you look close). That plus my filing of the edge is only slight on this one. Ed's rim is an indicated .045"; mine is .046". I aim for .042" but it's difficult to measure. Difficult to machine too, as I can't get any measurement without removing the case from the setup. I have to rely on a dial indicator. I'm working on a better way to index the case between the live center and the parting tool.

By the time I get it fully sorted, I'll have lost interest and gone on to something else...

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I was looking for the bullet length, not the cartridge O.A.L.
Ah...I have no idea...
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Unread 01-27-2014, 03:16 PM   #34
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There's a couple of loads for the 8mm Nambu in another thread at -

http://forum.lugerforum.com/showthread.php?t=31825

Several articles there, couple of different powders & bullets...I added one from a 1981 article, might be the best to start with...
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Unread 01-27-2014, 06:03 PM   #35
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I believe that there are also some loads for 8mm Nambu in a past edition of Handloader Magazine. Mike Venturino writes articles for that magazine, and he owns and shoots a Nambu. If I recall correctly(always a real question), he is casting his own bullets. I will see if I still have that edition. Usually, if the magazine has no information of interest to me, then I discard it after reading it.....otherwise I end up with waaaaay too many magazines.
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Unread 01-28-2014, 01:48 AM   #36
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I believe that there are also some loads for 8mm Nambu in a past edition of Handloader Magazine. Mike Venturino writes articles for that magazine, and he owns and shoots a Nambu. If I recall correctly(always a real question), he is casting his own bullets. I will see if I still have that edition. Usually, if the magazine has no information of interest to me, then I discard it after reading it.....otherwise I end up with waaaaay too many magazines.
Hi,

Mike and I have spoken more than once, over the years.

For me, his articles are quite good regarding the history of a particular firearm and his wife is a fantastic photographer, but his articles lack the depth of precision I particularly enjoyed from, say, Ken Waters.

On the laughable side, in one of the articles he wrote on military pistol handloading, he, admittedly, couldn't get his 9mm Luger to shoot without constant jamming. Again, obviously, he has no depth of experience with nor understanding of this particular firearm's design, yet, he writes as an "expert" anyway.

He now, by the way, has proclaimed himself an expert on the military firearms of the two World Wars. Well, good luck to him, but from those of us who have been precision handloading for military firearms for decades, quite a bit of depth is lacking in his work, here, as well.

It seems like the old timers have past into history, pretty much the same as everything else has now a days.


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Unread 01-28-2014, 03:49 AM   #37
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Hi All,

Well, while we are at it, what are your opinions on the strength of the T-14 Nambu design, as it is always called "weak" by all of those armchair experts out there; you know, the same crowd that claims that lead bullets won't shoot straight out of a 9mm.

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Unread 01-28-2014, 10:54 AM   #38
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I believe that there are also some loads for 8mm Nambu in a past edition of Handloader Magazine. Mike Venturino writes articles for that magazine, and he owns and shoots a Nambu. If I recall correctly(always a real question), he is casting his own bullets. I will see if I still have that edition. Usually, if the magazine has no information of interest to me, then I discard it after reading it.....otherwise I end up with waaaaay too many magazines.
I drag mine over to the local gun club. Someone will read them. I've seen Venturino's byline occasionally over the years, but don't recall whether I thought he was full of hot air.

I made two new 'mandrels' for the 40 S&W cases yesterday, one for the swaging and one for the tailstock chuck. I wasn't happy with how the rim thinning was going. I went back over my cases and there was a tendency for the thickness to slowly increase as I went through more & more cases. The swaging process in the 30-30 die was leaving a small ridge on the edge of the rim, throwing my 'zero' off. A new primer-centered ram fixed that. I also replaced the Nylon mandrel with a brass one. A quick test run showed marked improvement. I'm going over the other 20-odd test cases to correct the ones that got too thick.
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Unread 01-28-2014, 11:03 AM   #39
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Hi All,

Well, while we are at it, what are your opinions on the strength of the T-14 Nambu design, as it is always called "weak" by all of those armchair experts out there...
Do you recall what part they considered 'weak'???

I thought the opening at the rear under the cocking knob was odd; and the inability to get a feeler gauge in the receiver to measure headspace is annoying...It's also somewhat distracting to pull the trigger and see the trigger bar emerging from the bottom of the receiver...

I was particularly interested in the barrel itself, and the almost exact similarity to the 120mm 30 cal Luger 'pencil' barrel...I am tempted to try to find an old shot-out Nambu barrel/extension and drill & tap it for a 30 Luger 'pencil' barrel...
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Unread 01-28-2014, 05:26 PM   #40
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Hi,

Mike and I have spoken more than once, over the years.

For me, his articles are quite good regarding the history of a particular firearm and his wife is a fantastic photographer, but his articles lack the depth of precision I particularly enjoyed from, say, Ken Waters.

On the laughable side, in one of the articles he wrote on military pistol handloading, he, admittedly, couldn't get his 9mm Luger to shoot without constant jamming. Again, obviously, he has no depth of experience with nor understanding of this particular firearm's design, yet, he writes as an "expert" anyway.

He now, by the way, has proclaimed himself an expert on the military firearms of the two World Wars. Well, good luck to him, but from those of us who have been precision handloading for military firearms for decades, quite a bit of depth is lacking in his work, here, as well.

It seems like the old timers have past into history, pretty much the same as everything else has now a days.


Sieger





I do not know the gentleman(Ventrino) personally, and have never spoken with him on the phone. I do know that the first Luger that he purchased was a 30 Luger caliber, and he could never get it to run correctly. He sold it, and purchased a 9mm Luger. Apparently, he can get this Luger to preform reliably.

I was just trying to help out with some additional loading data for the Nambu. ANY handloader that is willing to take a loading "recipe" off of the INTERNET(non-factory powder company load) and use it without double checking it, is a fool as far as I am concerned. Perhaps I am overly cautious, but I still have all of my fingers, and both eyes!!
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