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10-28-2015, 10:52 AM,
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RE: 40 sbn
Appreciate all the responses, lots of good info and experience. Many thanks.
Sarge
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10-28-2015, 03:04 PM,
(This post was last modified: 10-28-2015, 03:04 PM by Caprock.)
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Caprock
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RE: 40 sbn
(10-28-2015, 11:09 AM)bobw Wrote: Sarge the 40-70 SBN has been around along time, it's one of the older Sharps rounds and it was a std chambering in the #1 Mid Range rifle thru 1876 This fact alone should tell you of the fine accuracy it is capable of. I sincerely doubt that anyone can bring it out using today's overszed chambers, 2 Fg, and greasers. bobw
Yep, and despite what Cartridges of the World says it was around far earlier than 1876. The three original chamberings for Sharps were the 40-70 sbn; 44-77; and 50-70. I wish I knew back when ordering what I know now, thats not much but its an improvement, about chambers and such. Would love to have a dedicated PP chamber for the one I have.
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10-28-2015, 11:15 PM,
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RE: 40 sbn
bobw & Caprock,
Many thanks. I was puzzling over why an original chambering was not more popular like the 44-77 & 50-70 you mentioned. I see alot mentioned about the 40-70 straight, the 40-70sbn, not so much. What was the twist rate for the original rifles in 40-70 sbn? Also was the original twist rates the same for all the 40 calibers?
Sarge
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10-29-2015, 03:03 PM,
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Mike
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RE: 40 sbn
(10-28-2015, 11:15 PM)Sarge Wrote: bobw & Caprock,
Many thanks. I was puzzling over why an original chambering was not more popular like the 44-77 & 50-70 you mentioned. I see alot mentioned about the 40-70 straight, the 40-70sbn, not so much. What was the twist rate for the original rifles in 40-70 sbn? Also was the original twist rates the same for all the 40 calibers?
Sarge Sarge, In Cartridges of the World there is a listing of cartridge data which includes rates of twists. My old edition shows a rate of twist of 18-20 inches for all of the Sharps .40 calibers, bottlenecked or straight. I'm not saying that's a fact, only what is listed therein. (They do seem to have trouble with dates in that book, maybe ROTs too.) And all of this talk, where I'm listening a lot more than talking, has me interested in trying a .40/70 BN again. Shoot sharp, Mike
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10-29-2015, 03:55 PM,
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bobw
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RE: 40 sbn
18-20 I'd say is probably correct, Mine is 1 in 18. I won't say 400 gr bullets weren't used back then but not like the 400+ gr ones used today which mandate a 1 in 16 as well as tighter twists. Both the 40-70SBN and the 40-700ss Utilized the same 330 ppb as a std factory load from what I've seen. A 370 gr ppb was std in the 40-90 SBN and was reputed to be a much better killer on buffalo. If a guy has a 40-70 SBN with one of today's chamber that is large enuf to seat a .408" groove dia greaser in it ,all is not lost. FL size the 1 st loading to fire form the case. After that just deprime, clean ,dry, reprime, Make sure the inside of the neck is clean and shiny, charge with Fg thru a drop tube Half the way up the neck, insert a hard card and compress the load to the neck/shoulder juncture no deeper. Lube wad, another card wad at this point put the assembled rd in your press and screw in a 40 S&W tungsten carbide sizer die and size down the neck to hold your .399/.400" patched bullet. That's right your patching to bore dia . I have had zero good results trying to patch to groove with my rifle in this 40-70 bn config. bobw ???????
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11-04-2015, 02:58 AM,
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RE: 40 sbn
bobw,
You have a pm.
Sarge
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