Monday, April 20, 2009

30-30 Winchester


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.30-30 Winchester

.30-30 cartridge between 5.56x45mm NATO (left) and 7.62x51mm NATO (right)

Type

Rifle

Placeoforigin

USA

Production history

Designer

Winchester

Designed

1895

Manufacturer

Winchester

Produced

1895-Present

Variants

.30-30 Ackley Improved

Specifications

Casetype

Rimmed, bottlenecked

Bulletdiameter

.309in (7.8mm)

Neckdiameter

.330in (8.4mm)

Shoulderdiameter

.401in (10.2mm)

Basediameter

.422in (10.7mm)

Rimdiameter

.506in (12.9mm)

Rimthickness

.063in (1.6mm)

Caselength

2.039in (51.8mm)

Primertype

large rifle

Ballistic performance

Bullet weight/type

Velocity

Energy

110gr (7.1g) FP

2,684ft/s (818m/s)

1,760ft穕bf (2,390J)

130gr (8.4g) FP

2,496ft/s (761m/s)

1,799ft穕bf (2,439J)

150gr (9.7g) FN

2,390ft/s (730m/s)

1,903ft穕bf (2,580J)

160gr (10g) cast LFN

1,616ft/s (493m/s)

928ft穕bf (1,258J)

170gr (11g) FP

2,227ft/s (679m/s)

1,873ft穕bf (2,539J)

Source: Hodgdon [1]

The .30-30 Winchester/.30 Winchester Center Fire/7.62x51Rmm cartridge was first marketed in early 1895 for the Winchester Model 1894 lever-action rifle.[2] The .30-30, as it is most commonly known, was America's first small-bore, sporting rifle cartridge designed for smokeless powder. The .30-30 is one of the most common deer cartridges in North America.

Contents

1 Naming

2 Characteristics and use

3 Rifles and handguns chambered in .30-30

4 Derivative cartridges

5 See also

6 References


//


Naming

Although the original name is .30 WCF, the -30 in the designation was added to the name by Marlin, who did not want to put the name of rival Winchester on their rifles when they were chambered for the cartridge soon after its introduction[3]. The -30 stands for the standard load of 30grains (1.9g) of early smokeless powder, which was on par with IMR/DuPont's 4064. Over time Marlin's variation on the name stuck, though ".30 WCF" is also used.

Characteristics and use

The .30-30 is considered by many to be the "entry-class" for modern deer cartridges. While it will take deer- and black bear-sized game, it is limited in effective range to approximately 200yards(183m) for that purpose. It is common to define the characteristics of similar cartridges as being in ".30-30 class" when describing their effectiveness. The .30-30 is typically loaded with bullets weighing between 150 and 170 grains (9.711.0 g), but lighter loads are possible. Bullets of up to 180grains (11.7g) can be used but the overall length restrictions of the lever action rifles used for this round limit their usefulness.

One of the primary reasons for the .30-30's popularity amongst deer hunters is its light recoil. Average recoil from a typical 150-grain (9.7g) load at 2,390feet per second (730m/s) in a 7.5-pound (3.4kg) rifle is 10.6pounds-force (47N) of felt recoil at the shooter's shoulder.[4] This, combined with the cartridge's ability to take the majority of large game in North America, as long as the game is within 200yards(180m) of the shooter, results in a highly effective hunting round.

Because the majority of rifles chambered in .30-30 are lever-action rifles with tubular magazines, most .30-30 cartridges are loaded with round-nose or flat-nose bullets. This is to prevent a spitzer-point bullet (the shape seen on the .30-06 Springfield) from setting off the primer of the cartridge ahead of it in the magazine during recoil. Were that to happen, the gun would probably be damaged or destroyed and the shooter seriously injured. The Savage Model 99 was introduced in 1899 with a rotary magazine, in part to avoid that issue. When used in single-shot rifles or handguns, such as the Thompson Center Arms Contender or Encore series, it is common for shooters to handload the cartridge with spire-point bullets for improved ballistics.

A notable exception to the "no-spire point" guidelines for tubular magazines is the new Hornady LEVERevolution line of flexible memory elastomer tipped ammunition[5]. By allowing a more efficient bullet shape, it allows a lighter bullet, higher muzzle velocity, and flatter trajectory. Given the popularity of the .30-30 cartridge and the lever action rifle, the potential market for the new ammunition is huge. Early reports indicate substantially improved accuracy with the round and at good terminal ballistic performance[6][7].

The .30-30 is one of the relatively few popular surviving centerfire rifle cartridges that have a rimmed case. The .30-30, like most other rimmed case examples, such as the 7.62x54mmR, the .303 British, the 9.3x74R, the .45-70, and the Nitro Express cartridges, are all old cartridge designs...(and so on)











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