Based on recent email swaps with Shane, I think it is a good time to review my design goals for the 223 Short, and see how the little round stacks up to our expectations.
225 Yard Coyote Getter - Shane's testing has shown varmint accuracy is good to 300 yards. √
Cheap Parent Cases - Shane's testing has shown that mixed headstamp 223 Rem make fine 223 Short cases with minimal to no loss during forming, and no significant difference in accuracy between brands. (221 cases necks are significantly smaller OD and had to be specially handled when resizing fired brass, so they do not meet my criteria for simple/easy forming.) √
Simple Forming - Forming the cases is achieved on basic loading presses, not requiring heavy duty presses. Here is a quote from Shane about the difference in forming cases from 223 Rem and 221 FB:
After fire forming and resizing, the 223 Short brass formed from 221 brass has a smaller outer neck diameter than that formed from 223 brass. The brass that makes up the neck (of the 223 Short) comes from the middle of the case body (thicker brass), when using 223 parent brass. When using 221 FB parent brass, the brass that makes up the neck (of the 223 Short) comes from the shoulder area (thinner brass). That is why I had problems sizing 221 FB brass and 223 brass with the same mandrel. I ordered two more mandrels from Lee. One was .001 smaller than original, and the other was .002 smaller. √
Small Powder Usage - Shane's use of L'il Gun shows powder use the same as the 22 Hornet (14gr max). Have been reading up on Blue Dot, and it may give us less powder use than L'il Gun and up the velocity past L'iL gun. That maybe the way I get my 225 yd +/_ 1.5" trajectory. √
Performance to match 218 Bee & 22 Rem Jet - Shane's testing confirms that the cartridge has much more performance than the two older style cartridges, we are encroaching on the 221 FB performance. √
Accuracy - Shane has experienced some brilliant accuracy from 50 yards to 300 yards. I was hoping for MOA, reality is MOA or better. Some like a 50 yard group with 8 rounds in one hole and 1/4" flier on the 9th shot, then 3/4" to 1-3/4" groups at 300 yards! Shane's rig has something to do with that I am sure. My rifle will be a shop bought Savage or Stevens.
Trajectory - I am looking for a MPBR of 225 yards, with +/_ 1.5". I will have a better chance of meeting that using much lighter bullets than Shane. √
While I still have to test the lighter bullets in a production rifle, and Shane is chasing optimal loads, it is obvious that we have met or exceeded my design goals. That is directly attributable to Larry, Jed and Shane's contributions to the project, they really know what they are doing.
I expect all data to be in by Fall, so we can present a finished round knowing exactly how much it costs to rechamber a rifle and reload this puppy.
We will post more shooting results and pictures, we need pictures of target and the rifle.
Thanks for following us so far, and we hope you stay with us to the end of the project.
Again, I am so grateful to the GBO family who have helped us along the way with comments, questions and suggestions. The four of us on the project are more than happy to share our findings of what went into the project at every stage. Hopefully, when we are done, some of you will want to try the cartridge and we will assist in any way we can.
Brian