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#5
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In the pictures above you see the older first cases I made from Nyati
cases and other cases that were Nyati clones. These were straight basic, long, untrimed cases, so I could get the longer case we wanted. We get asked about the process of doing it and here is picture sketch showing original case, a case with the start of a belt step, and finally a case after it is swaged and sized. Note the belt diameter ends up the same as the base diameter of the original brass. These cases we made years ago was how we got the 585HE started and tested and some guns done. This process can only work with original cases that have a thick corner radius to leave plenty of thickness ahead of the belt. In doing this process with different wildcats we have found cases that wouldn't work. ![]() Now these cases have a diameter that works with regular bolt guns, without extreme machining on the bolt, as opposed to 577NE and Trex. Here is picture of a case held in a Ruger bolt, for example.. ![]() And our case is large enough capacity to get the power, without being an oversize, soft case. Thicksided cases relative to size of the case are much harder to harden the heads and the lower body back up to proper strength. because of the extreme annealling needed, in the drawing and heading operations in the manufacturing process. Our cases are made with same cups and draws as the ultra high pressure Cheytac cases, and our real high pressure tests show they perform with no extraction problems. ![]() Here is picture of a O/U I had top barrel sleeved with smooth tube, and use the 585HE in it with lightweight, hollowbase Minie bullets. Shoots about as accurate as foster slugs in a 12ga. Bottom barrel is 3.5" 12ga smooth. ![]()
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Ed Hubel |
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