.300 Blackout Fired in .223 Rem — Mistake Is Disasterous « Daily Bulletin
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That 308 projectile at the bottom is amazing!
Would never have thought it could extrude so nicely into a 5.56 bore.
I remember talking to a guy that fired a 308 in his 2506....split the reciever open like a banana skin, blew out mag well and siezed the bolt in place.....bloody lucky he didnt get hurt
Nasty stuff, my brother gave a guy a 7x57 round for his cartridge collection at a range shoot and some how this guy chambered and shot it in his 270. The rifle held together but booted the hell out of him, the diameters are close at .284 and. 277 but that's sure playing with fire.
There are actually quite a few cartridges where cross chambering is possible that's a valuable reminder.
Good to know. I wouldn't have thought it possible. Everyday is a learning day. Luckily, I don't own a .223. Some of the comments are mildly amusing.
Is it possible to fire .223 through blk barrell? I assume it will not chamber fully?
Greetings Zimmer,
In the US they generally try not to have miss matches like that. The .280 Rem and 7mm WSM were both given longer headspace to stop them being chambered in the .270 Win and .270 WSM respectively. I suppose the .300 Blackout initially being a proprietary cartridge it may have missed that step. Just shows you can't be too careful and we should be careful with our calibre selections and especially reforming brass from one calibre to another. I prefer to make 6.5-06 brass from .26-06 cases partly for that reason.
Regards Grandpamac.
only some blackout loads will chamber.depends on the projectile.always thought in combat dropping weapon as running away with couple of 5.56 loads on top and blackout under would be cunning ploy....
there has been morethan one 308 fired through 270 before....not recomended.
Greetings All,
A mistake made in the US in post war years was firing an armor piercing 7.92mm German round in a .30-06. Last shot for the rifle and not all that good for the hunter either.
Regards Grandpamac.
Greetings All,
There were also stories about a 6.5 mm Arisaka being rechambered for the .30-06 after WW2. The owner hunted with it and shot a few deer with it but the recoil was major. He took it to a gunsmith who discovered the problem. He was using standard .30-06 rounds and the pill was being swaged down to 6.5 in the barrel. I believe that this was written up in the NRA Journal at the time. Amazingly the action took the beating but not the hunters shoulder.
Regards Grandpamac.
I can relate to this comment, Get people not knowing enough about cast bullets asking all sort of stupid questions that the answer is quite obvious if they thought about it.
“Had some dude come into the store the other day wanting .300 Blackout ammo to shoot in his 5.56 AR. It took 15 minutes of explaining for him to understand you got to have a .300 Blackout Upper!” — R. Williams
I know of a Thompson encore .223 that had a .222 round accidentally fired through it out of a new box of shop bought .223 ammo. Needless to say the shop/ammo manufacturer swiftly replaced the heavily damaged rifle with minimal fuss! Incredible the forces present in such a small cartridge.
I'm sure I recall someone on here saying they did that for years back in the times when deer cullers were moving from .222 to .223, someone shot hundreds of deer with left over .222 cartridges in a rifle chambered for .223. Eventually caused problems, but not for quite some time. Not something I would try!
Well at 53yrs old I just measured & found out that my Dads old French Double gun. Has 2 9\16 inch (65mm) Chambers. I was 14 the first time I chambered two 2 3/4 inch (70mm) shells in it and bowled my first ducks......And have done so for many years.....Just like my Dad had done for 50yrs.....
if you can find rolled crimped shells you should be fine.....sounds like you have been up till now anyhow..... just to see ...the other day I put a 3 1/2" shell in the old 2 3/4"U/O Bakail...AND SHE SHUT !!!!!!!!!!! so tried another 3 1/2" that was squarer across the crimp and definately wouldnt.... just goes to show not all shells are the same...rio make a 3" round thats roll crimped and folks been using them for years in 2 3/4" guns...same with buckshot loads.
Perhaps that's why they stamp numbers on cartridge cases?
The combinations are endless to catch the unwary out. One that catches many out is 20 gauge in a 12 gauge drops into front of chamber and 12 gauge behind it blows gun.Old pig hunters used 303's in 410 shotgun as a bail gun with not much drama.Obviously expands and pressure is low. Somebody fired a 7.62x39 in a 7x57 recently,not a good idea.