222 ,bofers steel barrel. Tight patch test says it's a 15 and 1/2 twist. Shooting 55gr sierra bullets. Could I be on the edge of stability with this combination?
222 ,bofers steel barrel. Tight patch test says it's a 15 and 1/2 twist. Shooting 55gr sierra bullets. Could I be on the edge of stability with this combination?
Which Sierra 55 grainer? Big difference between a softpoint flatbase and a FMJBT.. The FMJBT needs more twist, due to the length of the boattail. Thisis why the US Army changed rifling twist on the M-16 from 1-14" to 1-12" before fielding the rifle. Cold weather tests (Alaskan winter) showed bullets were going sideways through the target when fired in air temperatures of -40* F dense air - (MV of a 5.56mm NATO round out of an M-16 is supposed to be 3200 FPS @ 58*F.)
Last edited by Asa Yam; 03-26-2023 at 07:33 AM.
The 55gr gameking. Spitzer boat tail.
Thank you Asa. I found the jbm twist calculator yesterday.
Do your self a favor and use this calculator < https://www.jbmballistics.com/cgi-bin/jbmdrag-5.1.cgi >, NOT the Miller model. For any but the shortest .224 bullets, one turn in 15.5" is a very weak spin-rate.RG
P.S. You'll likely achieve best grouping via bullets <0.62" long . . . and FB at that!
Last edited by R.G. Robinett; 03-26-2023 at 11:31 AM.
I've never heard of a factory Sako 222 barrel with a twist that slow. Perhaps double checking may help.
As an aside.....I normally use a bronze bore brush(as it won't skip the lands), while pulling the brush back through the bore(as the brush would tend to tighten on the rod).
Hope this helps.
Kevin
I ran my borescope down the bore and counted 1 and 1/3 revolutions in what I can best tell is 23 inches of rifling. That comes to 15.3 twist approximately. Really slow.
Thank you, I will that. I've read they are metric but don't know for sure.
Actually......I've long used an old wooden clothesline pin clipped to the rod, to accurately indicate one complete rod revolution when pulling the brush back from the muzzle.
Old school.......but very accurate, and repeatable.
Kevin
The 1972 Sako 222 Rem Mag had a 1 in 15.5 twist.
the Speer 50 gr. TNT bullet was designed for 222 use..... I,ve used 1000`s..... good bullets....