I will contact Wayne and run this by him. I did ship the barrel with the original action for the same reason Dinny mentioned. It did appear the barrel had been test fired. I am going to hunt down some Winchester brass and handload some of my own and see if this will help. I am also on the hunt for a collet die so I can just neck size my brass.
All the loaded rounds appear to sit normally in the chamber as far as I can tell. They appear to sit flush as I recall. I will cycle some tonight through the chamber and seef I am getting any case head jutting from the chamber.
The discoloring was on the case prior to firing.
The marks on the bottom of the case appear as a shiny scuff mark. Bottom refers to the bottom half of case as it would be the first to contact the breech face.
All my other ammo cycles fine in my German mauser, but I am sure it has a roomy chamber due to it being military. My milsurp is some 1940 Turk stuff. Not the best QC as far as that goes.
The fired brass does not exhibit any other noticable marks and they did extract without any effort.
It is definitely coming to Ohio for the GBO shoot. I may not have it dressed up in its final form, but it is coming along with the little 22 pistol my wife bought herself.
I finally got her to spring for her own firearm.
Just some other info. This was oringinally a 22-250 so no extractor, ejector work was required. I chose a rebore cause it was about the same cost as a stub, and since this was used, in theory the barrel should maintain any stress relief. (Frankly I am not sure what that really means or if it helps accuracy, but from what I have read it should help). I had him bore it in a 1 to 9 twist. Military mausers had roughly a 1 to 9.5 twist. I hope to shoot the heavier 200 and 220 gr rounds with accuracy as welll as the 150 to 175 gr bullets.
I am still leaning towards getting a walnut mannlicher (full length style) stock. I kinda like the gray though. Maybe order a mannlicher gray laminate from GS Inc. and do that. I have the other stocks pictured to try as well. Gotta get the rounds to chamber first then worry about dressing this gal up to take her out.