memtb, to me, luck has played a large part in my hunting rifles. My brother was talking about a bolt action rifle in 35 Remington he was building at our hunting club meeting. A friend mentioned that his wife hunted with one for years in 35 Rem and that she didn't use it any more. When he asked if I was interested, I jumped on it. My brother had looked for years for one in good shape, finally gave up and started his build. I wasn't even really looking hard and had it fall into my hands.
Congratulations on your find! Good Luck can be a good friend!
I now often wish that great deals do not present themselves to me……too many firearms, and not enough relatives that would appreciate them…..especially those that are very important to me! memtb
You should not use a rifle that will kill an animal when everything goes right; you should use one that will do the job when everything goes wrong." -Bob Hagel
“I’d like to be a good rifleman…..but, I prefer to be a good hunter”! memtb 2024
Hoo boy, this could get expensive. Do you just expand and shorten or do you need to ream/turn necks? Okie John[/quote]
You need a stout enough press to reduce the diameter of the head of .308 cases slightly; I use a Redding Big Boss, and Redding Imperial Sizing Die Wax. Since the necks are being expanded, they don't require reaming or turning.
Decided to try it after owning (and hunting with) several .35 Remingtons. It's pretty easy, especially handy during the "shortages" that keep reoccurring every few years now. The .35 Remington is one of the rounds the major manufacturers make "seasonally," meaning whenever they get around to it.
So I looked at the case dimensions and decided to try it. It was so simple I only mentioned that it could be easily done in my chapter on the .35 Remington in the first Big Book of Gun Gack.
“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.” John Steinbeck
Hoo boy, this could get expensive. Do you just expand and shorten or do you need to ream/turn necks? Okie John
You need a stout enough press to reduce the diameter of the head of .308 cases slightly; I use a Redding Big Boss, and Redding Imperial Sizing Die Wax. Since the necks are being expanded, they don't require reaming or turning.
Decided to try it after owning (and hunting with) several .35 Remingtons. It's pretty easy, especially handy during the "shortages" that keep reoccurring every few years now. The .35 Remington is one of the rounds the major manufacturers make "seasonally," meaning whenever they get around to it.
So I looked at the case dimensions and decided to try it. It was so simple I only mentioned that it could be easily done in my chapter on the .35 Remington in the first Big Book of Gun Gack.[/quote]
i'll have to try it. my son's Marlin in 35 Rem only has 30 or 40 cases. i have about 100 308 cases that are just sitting there.
JES Reboring did an amazing job making my 30-30 to 35/30-30 in Winchester m94. i have Federal, Winchester and Remington 30-30 cases, but i gave them to my youngest son and Savage m340 in 30-30. i use 30-30 Starline brass in my 35/30-30, 30 and 357 Herrett.
Last edited by tdoyka; 06/24/23.
"Russia sucks." ---- Me, US Army (retired) 12B & 51B
Russian Admiral said, after the Moskva sank, "we have the world's worst navy but we aren't as bad as our army".
It's pretty easy, especially handy during the "shortages" that keep reoccurring every few years now. The .35 Remington is one of the rounds the major manufacturers make "seasonally," meaning whenever they get around to it.
FYI - I got a notification email from MidwayUSA yesterday that they had some Hornady LEVERevolution .35 Remington in stock. It’s been a bit hard to find for the last few years:
Hoo boy, this could get expensive. Do you just expand and shorten or do you need to ream/turn necks? Okie John
You need a stout enough press to reduce the diameter of the head of .308 cases slightly; I use a Redding Big Boss, and Redding Imperial Sizing Die Wax. Since the necks are being expanded, they don't require reaming or turning.
Decided to try it after owning (and hunting with) several .35 Remingtons. It's pretty easy, especially handy during the "shortages" that keep reoccurring every few years now. The .35 Remington is one of the rounds the major manufacturers make "seasonally," meaning whenever they get around to it.
So I looked at the case dimensions and decided to try it. It was so simple I only mentioned that it could be easily done in my chapter on the .35 Remington in the first Big Book of Gun Gack.
Thanks. Would a Rockchucker work?
Okie John
Originally Posted by Brad
If Montana had a standing army, a 270 Win with Federal Blue Box 130's would be the standard issue.
I have 100+ 35 Rem cases made from 308 that I no longer need. They were made by GRUMPA over on the Cast Boolit site a while back. About the time I bought them, a friend gifted me with a pile of older factory ammo. I loaded and tried a few of the reformed 308s and they worked well.
I would trade them for 1X Grendel brass if anyone wants a deal.
I would guess a Rockchucker would work. Probably the quality of the lube is more important than the press.
i use the Lee Classic Cast press. i have done '06 cases to 270 Win, 6.5x55, 7x57, 8x57, 9.3x57, 7.65x53 and a couple of more that i forget. i use 30-30 cases for the 35/30-30, 30 Herrett and 357 Herrett. the 221 Remington Fireball to 20 Vartarg.
i use lanolin and 99% isopropyl alcohol (8:1) or just straight lanolin. i can't tell the difference, other than the time using straight lanolin.
"Russia sucks." ---- Me, US Army (retired) 12B & 51B
Russian Admiral said, after the Moskva sank, "we have the world's worst navy but we aren't as bad as our army".
Turning .308s in .35 Remingtons takes a little more effort that the resizings you list, because the case head of the .35 Remington (thickest part of any rifle case) is only .457" in diameter, considerably less than the the .308's head.
“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.” John Steinbeck
I've always wonder why Savage used that head dimension! But back when the .35 was introduced the ".30-06" head-size hadn't quite become standard. (Actually, the "standard" .30-06 head-size is actually 12mm, the diameter of the 8x57's head. But that's another subject.)
“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.” John Steinbeck
I've always wonder why Savage used that head dimension! But back when the .35 was introduced the ".30-06" head-size hadn't quite become standard. (Actually, the "standard" .30-06 head-size is actually 12mm, the diameter of the 8x57's head. But that's another subject.)
I missed something.... Mule Deer, what head dimension, that Savage used, are you referring to?
"Turning .308s in .35 Remingtons takes a little more effort that the resizings you list, because the case head of the .35 Remington (thickest part of any rifle case) is only .457" in diameter, considerably less than the the .308's head."
“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.” John Steinbeck