by 1911fan on Sun Feb 21, 2010 3:59 pm
Technical differences, a cannelure was not intended as a crimping groove in the beginning, it was found to work as one, and thus located to what the manufacturer thought would be a good place, but in a rifle, you crimp to optimum OAL for your rifle, not to the groove.
The original intent of the cannelure comes from trying to hold jackets and cores together when jacketed bullets were just coming into use. Lots of bullets would open the jacket, the light jacket would snag on fur,clothing or whatever, and the heavy lead core would just separate. If they stuck together, they worked better and the idea of controlled expansion was born.
Crimping grooves are just that, the place to crimp a handgun or rifle round when OAL is critical to function. They are often cut different with a distinct edge to the groove for the case mouth to fit into.
The word cannelure is from the concept of using heavy siege guns to collapse guard towers and walls by smashing a horizontal line across the bottom of the wall above the foundation, this would destroy the structural integrity of the dry laid stonewalls which would cause the upper works to collapse down.