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-   -   35 Remington Reloading (http://www.outdoorsmenforum.ca/showthread.php?t=330047)

wolfhunter 09-24-2017 08:22 PM

35 Remington Reloading
 
Anyone out there reload 35 rem for marlin rifles. I have the newer Marlin 336 in 35 rem. The rifle shoots OK with the Hornady 200gr ftx bullets, but wanted to try the the Hornady 200 gr roundnose bullets. Loaded the bullets to the exact specs as in Hornady manual. Went to load the ammo into the rifle and found the handle doesn't close all the way to depress the trigger. I even seated the bullet lower and still the same problem. Anyone else encounter the same problem or is it the rifle or wrong bullet.

Dick284 09-24-2017 08:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3628898)
Anyone out there reload 35 rem for marlin rifles. I have the newer Marlin 336 in 35 rem. The rifle shoots OK with the Hornady 200gr ftx bullets, but wanted to try the the Hornady 200 gr roundnose bullets. Loaded the bullets to the exact specs as in Hornady manual. Went to load the ammo into the rifle and found the handle doesn't close all the way to depress the trigger. I even seated the bullet lower and still the same problem. Anyone else encounter the same problem or is it the rifle or wrong bullet.

Try chamberings a just sized case, no primer powder or bullet. Betchya your dies aren't set up properly.

wolfhunter 09-24-2017 08:40 PM

Already tried that, closes just fine.

Dick284 09-24-2017 08:55 PM

Your seating die is set wrong.

Run a trimmed and sized case up in your press, with the ram all the way up, with no die in the press.
Loosen the lock ring on your seating die and slowly run it into your press and over the case on the press ram. You'll hit a point where you'll feel resistance as you screw the die in. Pull the ram on the press down, turn the die in 1/8 of a turn more and set the die's lock ring.

Now back out the seating stem on the seating die about 3 turns. Slowly seat the bullet into a case and slowly. Back the ram on the press out and see how you are seating the bullet. Lower the seating stem till you get the bullet seated to the upper 3/4 of the cannalure on the bullet. You will now be seating your bullet with a light crimp.

200 gr round nose? Right?

wolfhunter 09-24-2017 09:05 PM

It is the 200 gr rn and I'm not new to reloading. I reload all my ammo, don't know why this giving me a problem. Even used new brass and also used a crimp die.

Salavee 09-24-2017 09:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3628929)
It is the 200 gr rn and I'm not new to reloading. I reload all my ammo, don't know why this giving me a problem. Even used new brass and also used a crimp die.


A chamber casting may be in order . Stranger things have happened

Dick284 09-24-2017 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3628929)
It is the 200 gr rn and I'm not new to reloading. I reload all my ammo, don't know why this giving me a problem. Even used new brass and also used a crimp die.

Throw that crimp die in the trash. Your seating die will give you all the crimp you'll ever need.

35 Rem isn't the most robustly built casing out there, if your dies are a bit out of adjustment you could be distorting your brass ever so slightly.

wolfhunter 09-24-2017 09:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Salavee (Post 3628942)
A chamber casting may be in order . Stranger things have happened

That's what I was thinking.

FellSwoop 09-24-2017 09:44 PM

Obviously this cartridge is a POS and you need to get rid of the rifle. I'll take it off your hands. Been looking for a 35 marlin for years. Congrats on finding one.

Dean2 09-24-2017 09:48 PM

There is nothing wrong with the chamber, most likely. Always check the simplest stuff fist.

In all likely hood you are over crimping your bullets and the roll on the case is large enough to stop the case from fully chambering. Set your seating die to not crimp and run the rounds through. If they go, add only enough crimp to do the job and allow proper chambering. If the uncrimped cartridge won't chamber then you are set too far out and the bullet is contacting the lands. Seat them deeper into the case.

wolfhunter 09-24-2017 09:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FellSwoop (Post 3628967)
Obviously this cartridge is a POS and you need to get rid of the rifle. I'll take it off your hands. Been looking for a 35 marlin for years. Congrats on finding one.

Don't think so, but thanks for the offer.

Salavee 09-24-2017 10:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3628953)
That's what I was thinking.

...especially these days.

Puma 09-25-2017 07:51 AM

.35 Rem
 
If you'd like to try one of your loads for chamber fit in my .35 R let me know, Im close to Airdrie.

wolfhunter 09-25-2017 12:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dean2 (Post 3628971)
There is nothing wrong with the chamber, most likely. Always check the simplest stuff fist.

In all likely hood you are over crimping your bullets and the roll on the case is large enough to stop the case from fully chambering. Set your seating die to not crimp and run the rounds through. If they go, add only enough crimp to do the job and allow proper chambering. If the uncrimped cartridge won't chamber then you are set too far out and the bullet is contacting the lands. Seat them deeper into the case.

Thanks to everyone who offered there advice. The problem was to much crimp, first time loading bullets with a crimp.

Salavee 09-25-2017 12:41 PM

Great . Easy fix.

58thecat 09-25-2017 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3629349)
Thanks to everyone who offered there advice. The problem was to much crimp, first time loading bullets with a crimp.

Bam, we all learn something when reloading, I always start with a casing, seat the bullet, no primer and work around with that before anything, cycle it through the action etc.

qwert 09-25-2017 04:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wolfhunter (Post 3628929)
snip
used new brass and also used a crimp die.

Did you trim the new brass to a uniform length before loading?

What make and model of crimp die?
(Lee Collet taper crimp? or Lee Collet roll crimp? or Lee Factory solid crimp?
other brand of solid taper crimp? or solid roll crimp?

Were you seating and crimping in a single combined operation?

Good Luck, YMMV.


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