Re: 6.5 grendal
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: MudBug</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Mike Hull</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: sandwarrior</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Greg Langelius *</div><div class="ubbcode-body">My ony objection to the Grendel is the proprietary grip the developer has imposed on reamers, etc.
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Greg</div></div>
I totally agree on that one. What's going to happen is if he doesn't move up with this project it's going to be moved over. I don't want to see that. But, I've watched as big gun companies do this to themselves as well. </div></div>
Another + 1 here. I've believed since the beginning that AA would sink themselves, and a good round, with that type of thinking/acting.
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I understand what you guys are saying, and there are even times when I feel the same, but the 6.8 SPC went the other way and it almost died. If it hadn't been for a few people with the resources believing in it, then dumping a bunch of time and money into improving it and promoting it the 6.8 SPC would be on it's way to nowhere. </div></div>
I think the biggest thing holding both these rounds back is the criteria set by the "world market". Both were pretty much born of the same competition if not the exact same one and pretty much at the same time.
I think the 6.8 is doing better than it was initially because of changes made by various smaller players in the industry. Good changes. Like giving it a longer leade and hopping up pressure in the rounds. going with the most useful bullet weight for the cse size too. You can get, 3000 fps from one using a 100 gr. bullet. AA also lengthened the barrel and gas tube. Rem makes a bolt gun in this caliber and it gets all kinds of velocity.
But now, you have the .223/5.56 syndrome where you don't fire the high pressure bullet in the original chamber. And since we let the Europeans in on it they (CIP) say you have to call it something else. That is stupid. We've always had tinkerers with cartridges here and just noted what was done.
The 6.5 Grendel is getting <span style="text-decoration: line-through">twisted</span> {edit: worked} in every direction, but AA want's nothing to do with it. As mentioned in my previous paragraph, one of the ways you get a 5.56 (of equal dimensions to a .223 BTW) to get so hot is to lengthen the leade. Roy Weatherby was the first to incorporate that into a rifle in the 1940's. His is another one you have to watch what leade is in the barrel or your could end up with serious overpressure. AA also, won't change the gas length, because he wants to remain true to the original competition configuration. That's why when you look at his loads online there is a .5 gr. gap between low and high powder charges. The round definitely isn't for a casual reloader. You need to be serious about reloading this if you do it in an AR. It could be improved upon, but as I stated earlier AA wants it in the original configuration.
Anyhow, bottom line is litigation as well. If someone hurt themselves putting hp into lp guns, they would have to bear that themselves. Insurance is a big player behind the scenes.