LumberZach wrote:Ghost wrote:LumberZach wrote:To be fair, it would be an interesting project and squeezing extra velocity might make for some fun results.
I'm not following where the extra velocity would come from? Are you saying the .224 projectile would have more velocity than the .308? I could see that but certainly it can't exceed a traditional 5.56/.223 in velocity as it's being shot from a bastardized shortened version of the original case.
I am saying that a 300blk sabot will have more velocity than a 223/5.56. Or at least that is my expectation, I have not played with sabots at all but I do find them fairly interesting.
Ok, what I'm getting at is that a 300 BLK is made from a shortened .223/5.56 case so, correct me if I'm wrong as I'm not into BLK, you should not be able to load a 300BLK sabot with as much powder as a 223/5.56 which in turn would yield less velocity. Now on the other hand if you take a sabot filled with a .223 and load it in a 30-06 you would see some gains as far as velocity is concerned, I believe they used to be sold as accelerators for the 30-06. I think that's the flaw everybody is eluding to is that the 300BLK is made from .223 brass so going back is circular and not without loss in accuracy and velocity. But the question of the OP was if it's possible and it looks like it is. Fine with me if people try it.
Edit to add: Looks like you can buy 30-06 accelerators
http://www.midwayusa.com/product/220009/remington-express-ammunition-30-06-springfield-accelerator-55-grain-pointed-soft-point-box-of-20I also came across this and thought it should be mentioned as the muzzle brake could be an issue for someone.
E. Arthur Brown Co, Inc has 30 caliber sabots for reloading!
Big Accuracy Requirement - Before firing sabots in any gun, clean the copper and lead fouling out of that barrel. If you don't accuracy will suffer.
Big Safety Requirement - Never fire sabots in barrels that have muzzle brakes. Premature flowering in the brake could act as a barrel obstruction.
Use 50-60 Grain Bullets - The rifling twist rate on most .30 calibers is 1:12 or 1:10. For .224 caliber bullets, this twist rate is best suited to bullets in the 50-60 gr. weight range