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Garand
05-28-2006, 10:03 AM
Excellent article I found while surfing the net, for all Enfield lovers;


Headspace 101 for .303's

Several generations of American shooters have been convinced by bad information that something mysterious and scary called "headspace" should be checked and re-checked on almost any surplus rifle, especially Lee-Enfields. The truth is less interesting but still worth knowing.

Stripped to its essentials, with a rimmed cartridge like the .303, headspace is simply the distance between the front of the bolt and the back of the barrel. It's the space where the "head" (rim) of the cartridge fits when the rifle is loaded.



Since there has to be some room to allow for varying rim thickness, the headspace is normally a bit more than necessary - giving what I call "head clearance", a little extra space so the bolt can close easily, even on the thickest rim allowed.

In addition, Lee-Enfields and their ammo were often made with a fair amount of space for dirt, mud, snow and other battlefield debris between the chamber and the cartridge's body and shoulder ("Body/shoulder clearance"). Since the cartridge is controlled by its rim, this clearance doesn't do any harm (except to handloaders who insist on full-length sizing).

When a full-power .303 cartridge is fired, a whole string of events occurs.



1. The firing pin shoves the case forward, rim against the breech.
2. The primer detonates. If it's not heavily crimped in place, it backs out, shoving the bolt and barrel as far apart as it can.
3. The thin, forward part of the case expands to fill and grip the chamber while the bullet moves out of the case and down the barrel.
4. The solid case head can't expand and grip the chamber, so it moves rearward, re-seating the primer, stretching the case walls just forward of the head, and stopping when it hits the bolt face. (In rear-locking actions like the Lee, the bolt and receiver also compress/stretch to add a little more movement. The higher the pressure, the more they move.)
5. If (and only if) the amount of head movement exceeds the elastic limits of the case, the cartridge separates into two pieces.

New cartridge cases can normally stretch a lot before breaking. Even with a minimum rim .054" thick and maximum "field" headspace of .074", the resultant .020" head clearance is well within the limits of new brass and it's very unlikely a new case will separate even if the headspace is somewhat more than the field maximum (which is pretty rare).

OK, but if one does separate I'm in deep trouble, right? Not really. It seems the short "cup" left behind the break is pretty good at keeping most of the gas where it belongs. Here's a demonstration -

First I took a case that had been reloaded with heavy loads enough times so it was stretched near breaking.



I loaded it with a 180-grain bullet and 40 grains of 4895 - a reasonably stiff charge about 2 grains under "maximum" - and fired it in a much-abused Savage No.4 with a clean sheet of typing paper wrapped around the receiver.



When I opened the bolt, the separated head extracted. (The front piece of the case fell out when I happened to turn the rifle muzzle-up while removing the paper.)



The sooty paper shows where some gas escaped. No rips or holes, just a little soot - and only where the bolt meets the barrel. Had I been shooting from the shoulder and wearing glasses, I probably wouldn't have noticed the leak at all.

The point of all this is that excess headspace, even a bit beyond normal limits, isn't the terrible danger we've heard so much about. It's not a good thing for consistent ignition or long case life (although handloaders who neck-size or adjust F.L. dies carefully can control this) - but it's not a disaster waiting to happen.

Unless you're consistently getting broken cases when firing new ammo or brass, there's not much reason to be worried about headspace in these sturdy old Lee-Enfields. Relax and enjoy!

Handloading

If you handload, there's no need to mess with bolt heads - changing the rifle's clearances to yield longer case life. You can control head clearance simply by changing technique.

When you fire a new case for the first time, use a moderate powder charge and put a thin film of sizing lube on the case. This inhibits the case walls from gripping the chamber and eliminates or reduces stretch even if head clearance is significant. Another way of accomplishing the same end is to use a bullet seated out far enough to jam into the lands, "headspacing" on the bullet instead of the case.

After you've fire-formed your new cases they will fill the chamber fully, headspacing on the shoulder just like a rimless cartridge. If you neck size, you'll have zero "headspace". If you have to full length size, adjust the die so the cases chamber with just a bit of resistance in the last few degrees of bolt rotation.

Finally, don't try to turn a .303 into a magnum. Keep the pressures below the limit and you reduce the small amount the bolt and receiver compress/stretch on firing in a rear-locking action.

With these techniques you can make your .303 cases last for dozens of loading cycles, even if your "gauge headspace" is well beyond the .074" field spec.

RIKA
05-28-2006, 10:14 AM
First rate post Garand. Of much, much more value than the usual jabber, even if you don't own a 303. :beer:

RIKA

copycat
05-28-2006, 06:12 PM
Well maybe I've been mistaken all this time, but I've not got to worried about headspace as long as the bolt and reciever numbers match.

brass hammer
05-28-2006, 06:23 PM
once again,GARAND!!!,,,a most excellent of USEFUL/PERTINENT info.


:beer: :wavey:

Garand
05-28-2006, 06:40 PM
Honestly Rika, I really don't believe shooters can live without an Enfield in their toy box!!!!

Coyote
05-28-2006, 06:41 PM
Garand, +1!

Fantastic info, as always.

Terry G
05-29-2006, 12:04 AM
SMLE'S are POS. Too slow and don't take a drop in. Impossible to "can". I only bought these two so no one would make the mistake of thinking they were worthwhile and wasting their money.

Terry G
05-29-2006, 12:40 AM
Whoop's! Got cut off somehow. SMLE'S are really my favorite C&R rifles. I like the MKIII's better then the MK IV's for no other reason but their looks. Something about that snub-nosed look shout's "I mean business". I even died the slings with tea as the British did.

Gecko45
05-29-2006, 12:41 AM
Great post!

Does it hold true for other rimmed cartridges like the 7.62x54R?

Terry, it would seem that the muzzle of a #4 Enfield could be easily turned and threaded for a supressor.

andy
05-29-2006, 07:30 AM
It seems you are wrong. You have to have a $300 set of barrel vise, action wrench, and go and no go headspace gauges. It's very common for threads to "stretch" a bit when tightened, removed, replaced and retightened. This not only effects headspace, but also ends up with the front sight "canted" in a lot of cases.

It's possible to thread the muzzle accurately without having to remove the barrel, but doing so is way beyond your level of machining "ability".

Gecko45
05-29-2006, 08:19 AM
None of what you said (including timing the barrel) is of any difficulty to anyone that knows what they are doing.

The real question is, who's enough of a Cretin to butcher the Empire's Finest?

Terry G
05-29-2006, 10:08 PM
I think you answered your own question, Gecko. If any of his talk is to be believed (which I doubt), he has cut-up, butchered, and pretty much rendered useless hundreds of firearms..... Sarah Brady would love him.

BigEd63
05-30-2006, 05:13 PM
Yawn.....so what..you just lok up the specs for whatever action and caliber you're working on to barrel or rechamber.

Have not dome it myself for rifles but it's not that hard if you take the time to learn how like anyhtring else.

neolithic hunter
12-13-2006, 09:15 PM
now garand how did i miss this post. well if your having head space problems with that old enfield shooter. the problem is easier to solve than most people would believe. the one really good thing i like about the SMLE rifle is that if for what ever reason the headspace goes south, all you have to do is replace the front of the bolt. they are avalible in 00's, 01's, 02's, 03's. just get the right one and it will fix the headspace prlblem for a good while. numrich, and springfield sporters used to carry all of the bolt heads. don't know if they still have them but you mite want to look. LOL :cool:

BIGBORE
12-14-2006, 02:22 AM
I bought an SMLE from Monkey Ward back about 1960 that had very excessive headspace. Apparently MW had bought a large quantity of these in the cosmoline and hired some kids for a buck an hour to strip them down and clean the cosmoline off/out of them in a solvent bath. Apparently a number of them were disassembled and put in the solvent at the same time, and then parts retrieved randomly for the reassembly. Mine probably had a maximum length bolt head originally and wound up with a minimum length one. Quite possibly the rifle that wound up with my rifles original bolt head wouldn't even chamber a round.
Of course this senerio is nothing but my own speculation, as I wasn't there when those rifles were being cleaned up. But it does offer a likely explanation as to how my SMLE wound up with such extreme headspace. The rifle was otherwise in beautiful condition, nicer than one would expect for $12.98. (1960, remember!)
This just goes to show you that you should check the headspace on a Lee Enfield of unknown origin. :)
Best regards, BIGBORE