Does any shoot this round I would like to know how much more power it has over the standard 30-30.
Thanks
Yes I do have and enjoy a .30-30 Ackley Improved Contender Handgun. As per the difference in case capacity (while I have not performed this test for myself) I have an article in front of me that states the following:
I worked with Remington Brass. The original .30-30 Winchester Brass weighed in at between 130 to 132 grains, as did the same cases after fireforming. When filled to the base of the neck with water and weighed, the .30-30 Winchester Cases held 37 to 38 grains of water. After fireformin them into .30-30 Ackley Improved cases they held 50 to 50.5 grains of water. Dividing 50.5 grains by 38 grains equals an increase of 32.8% more capacity for the .30-30 Ackley Improved versus the .30-30 Winchester.
The reason for the increase in case capacity is that the body is blown out to have less taper (increasing case capacity), and in addition the shoulder is also moved farther forward (also increasing case capacity). This new shape also does a lot to reduce Case Head Thrust.
In PO Ackley's Handbook for Shooters and Handloaders there is a very interesting article on Case Head Thrust pertaining to the .30-30 AI Cartridge.
In his tests, Ackley actually unscrewed the barrel from a Model 94 chambered for the .30-30AI ONE turn and fired a couple of cartridges (His MAX Loads according to the article). Upon firing these cartridges the dimension from the case head to the shoulder did not change, ultimately there was no case stretching, and the only thing noticeable was the primer backed out of the cartridge case.
He then repeated the test with the barrel unscrewed ONE and ONE HALF turns out, and TWO FULL turns out, again creating excessive headspace.
Then Ackley screwed the barrel back in, and removed the locking lugs from the Model 94 Action, and fired the gun with only pressure on the Finger Lever holding the action closed. Again the case showed no signs of stretching, but rather just the primer backed out of the cartridge case.
In the end Ackley summarized that because of the straightened side walls of the cartridge case, and the sharper shoulder, the cartridge case was gripping the chamber walls so tightly that it was producing MINIMUM Case Head Thrust.
Historical Notes taken from the Reloading Bench:
The .30-30 Winchester is one of the most popular sporting cartridges ever produced. It is the standard American deer cartridge, but its popularity is due more to the light, handy carbines that chamber it than to its ballistics. Many hunters have wished that the .30-30 Winchester had a little more oomph. The 30-30 Improved does just that by providing an additional 200 to 300 fps within the working pressure limits of the standard Model 94 Winchester action, which is 38,000 CUP maximum. There are various versions of the 30-30 Improved, but the Ackley version is the most popular. The exact date of introduction is not know, but was probably sometime in the early 1950's or perhaps even earlier.
The loads I am using in my .30-30 AI Contender Barrel simply fall out of the chamber when the action is opened and the barrel rotated upwards at a 45 degree angle. I also see no signs of the impression of the rimfire firing pin on my primers (which is an indicator of pressures above 45000 CUP I'm told. The charge I am using to drive 125gr. Nosler Ballistic Tips to a chronographed 2683 FPS from my Super 14 .30-30 AI Super 14 Contender Barrel is 13.3% more than the load I used in Super 14 .30-30 Winchester Contender Barrels (and max according to several different loading manuals) with the same bullet. For the record my .30-30 AI Load produces 283 FPS more velocity than when loading the same Bullet and Powder in .30-30 Winchester Cases (fired in my .30-30 AI as a fireform load).
No I do not have pressure testing equipment, or a test lab. However I have been handloading for more years than I care to admit to, and have been handloading for Contenders for all but a couple of those years. As such in all of those years I have never once stretched a Contender Frame, and when using .30-30 Based Cartridges have never had so much as a hint of sticky extraction, but rather fired cartridges fall right out of the chamber when the muzzle is raised slightly.
Is my .30-30 AI operating at excessive pressures ? I do not know, but I do believe they are not to hot for my particular barrel.
SD Handgunner