
The 7.65×53mm Mauser was the result of considerable experimentation by Paul Mauser to optimize the bullet diameter for use with the new smokeless propellant introduced as Poudre B in the 1886 pattern 8mm Lebel that started a military rifle ammunition revolution. It is also known as 7.65×53mm Argentine, 7.65×53mm Argentine rimless, 7.65mm Argentine, 7.65×53mm Belgian Mauser or 7.65mm Belgian (in the United States) and 7.65×53mm Mauser (in Belgium).īallistically it is comparable to the. by the C.I.P.) is a first-generation smokeless powder rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge developed for use in the Mauser Model 1889 rifle by Paul Mauser of the Mauser company. The 7.65×53mm Mauser (designated as the 7,65 × 53 Arg. Almost all of my reloading is at the lower to mid-range areas.Source(s): Cartridges of the World, 11th ed
#1891 argentine mauser ammo manuals#
I'm not sure that any of the more recent manuals would be of use to me since most are either published by the jacketed bullet makers or the powder makers and concentrate on their respective products.
#1891 argentine mauser ammo plus#
I've got all the Lyman cast bullet manuals(First thru #4) plus regular Lyman 48 & 49 and several others. We'll see how they perform.Īs to manuals, jeep421 was the poster who only had the Hornady manual. It will have a handful of loads for this round, it however will also have information for the 308 Winchester round and for cast loads that information is valid for the 7.65 case.Thanks for the information. They will all pretty much have the same information as this thread. I don't know if I could find littlegirls thread or not, a search on the argie should bring up a lot of posts by Larry and probably myself. The lyman's have run all over the place recently, my older version makes 314 X 304 with ww alloy. If you have the NOE versions they should pour out right close to that. The 314299 should have a body diameter of 313 to 314 and a nose diameter of 304 ish. Need to cement a reinforcement so it doesn't break completely. Not sure what is meant by "304" or "305".ĭo you have a link to the write-up you mentioned? BTW I shot a sky screen support to my CED chrono a couple of days ago. I'm guessing that you are recommending a 314. I have the NOE version of the 311299, 314299. He didn't think she could do it on her own seeing as she was 13-14 at the time but she done the whole thing while I was off to work, and when I got home I helped her set-up the chronograph and I let her do everything else.OK! No pound cast.

He didn't think she could do it on her own seeing as she was 13-14 at the time but she done the whole thing while I was off to work, and when I got home I helped her set-up the chronograph and I let her do everything else. Ken had asked her to do a work-up on the round and report back the results. Let the parallel sided boolits run up into the throat and don't push them or they will try to rivet and distort causing you to lose accuracy.Īnother powder that works well in the argie cases is H-322 it demands a filler to shoot it's best however.Ībout 6 years ago littlegirl wrote up a nice post on the argie rounds and used 3 rifles to show different velocity's with different barrel lengths and the affects filler had on the group sizes and velocity variations. Use the big nose on the 314 or the LEE to help with alignment, 304 is pretty close 305 is better. I have a 225gr loverign design that is built around the argie throats and even it is not quite enough to fill all the room in there. You'll start looking for a 260gr boolit to fit in there. The argie is the one rifle I don't recommend you try to do a throat pound slug on. I want to be on the safe side due to reports of pressures and these 2 lug small rings. I use factory Norma cases and formed cases from various brands and makes of 8x57 and 30-06 cases.

Best accuracy seems to be in the 1800 - 1900 fps range. I use a 3/4 gr Dacron filler over the powder. I've found excellent accuracy with 4895 under the Lee bullet in the 27 - 30 gr range depending on flavor of 4895. I use Lar's 2500+ or NRA 50/50 lube with no leading and excellent accuracy. The RL alloy bullets are sized, lubed and GC'd in a. I just lube and seat/crimp a Hornady GC on the COWW alloyed ones in a. The ones I've slugged that have excellent bores all slug right at. Most of my M91s also have "tight" barrels I guess from the reports mentioned in other threads. The COWW alloy will drop from my older single cavity at. The AC'd bullets have a BHN after 7- 10 days of 14 - 17 and when WQ'd they run around 22 for the COOW alloy and 18 for the RL alloy. These days mine are most often cast of COWWs + 2& tin or a mix of range lead I have (high antimony content) with lead a 70 - 30% and then 2% tin is added to that. For many years I have had excellent results with the Lee C312-185-1R over most any flavor of 4895 including IMR4895 in numerous 7.65 Argentine M91 (currently have 3 of them) and M1909 Mausers.
