Objective: Develop safe hunting loads for my sporterized M96 Swede.
I have had a sporterized 6.5X55 Swede for about ten years. When my brother gave it to me he gave me a couple hundred rounds of ammunition. The ammunition had 140 grain Nosler Partitions, 120 grain Remington C-L, and military loads. An hour after going into the field I killed a buck.
This winter I put a Bushnell Banner 3x9 on it. And shot up some ammunition sighting it in.
So the time has come to reload for it. A few years ago I purchased 500 Remington 140-grain C-L bullets. I have powder and primers on hand. I needed cases and resolved that by buying 50 Winchester cases.
I have reviewed a great deal of reloading data for the 6.5X55 and found that the majority of loads call for a moderate burning powder. I have decided to go for slower burning powders. Over the years I have found that cases with adequate powder capacity and a small neck do well on slow burning powders. The best example I can give you is the .243 Winchester and the .270 Winchester. I have successfully burned H4831 and slow burning Winchester Ball powders in over bore capacity cases for years. I feel that slow burning powders will proved high velocity at lower pressure in the M96 action. Some would argue that H4831 stick powder is hard to work with when using a powder measurer. I set my Lyman 55 to drop a load, and then use a dribbler to bring it to where I want it. When using WMR or other ball powders I can drop a measured charge easily.
It is my intention to take my Chrony with me when I test these loads. Hopefully by tracking velocity, along with case expansion, primers, and bolt lift I will keep out of trouble. Accuracy is another concern after all the safety related issues. I do not think accuracy will be a problem with this rifle based on the results of other ammunition I have fired in it.
I reviewed over 30-years of data using H4831 with 140-grain bullets. The load combinations that I loaded fall within the safe limits of published reloading manuals. Of course there are variances between some manuals. My top load does not come near the most extreme maximum load.
The kicker is WMR(Winchester Magnum Rife Powder). I felt cheated when Winchester dropped it. I have had good results with WMR in the .270 Winchester. Results with 140 grain .277 are better then results with H4831. Along with my WMR came a data sheet for popular over bore capacity cases. There was no data for the 6.5 Swede. In fact I looked at some of my older publications and some powder companies have ignored the 6.5 Swede in the past. I called my brother in regards to using WMR in the 6.5 Swede. He still has a M70 in 6.5, and a Husqvarna in 6.5 Swede. He has not loaded WMR in the 6.5 Swede but he has in other cases including his new 6.5-284. Most of his 6.5X55 loading has been with IMR4895 and Accurate 4895.
I loaded 20 cases breaking the loads into five increments. I believe the heaviest load is 2-grains less then a safe maximum. Again I will be wearing safety equipment, checking cases, bolt lift, and looking for abnormal increase in velocity. This is a little different step for me do to the lack of data, but I believe I am going the right direction.
After field-testing I will be able to state what H4831 charges worked in my rifle because they will fall within published data. Unfortunately when it comes to WMR all I’ll be able to say is that it worked, did not work, or I am stuffing a couple more grains into the cases and waiting for another day to shoot. My bright, sunny Chrony location has snow falling on it so there will be some delay.
I have read the pros and con’s regarding the strength of the M96 action. My intent is to have safe loads in the rifle. My grandkids maybe shooting it one day.
I would be interested in experiences with H4831 and WMR in the M96 Swede.