Gun Digest - .338LM Ultimate Long-Range Round

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OVERKILL

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http://www.gundigest.com/shooting-articles-advice/338-lapua-mag-ultimate-long-range-round

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The .338 Lapua Mag. dates to 1983, when Research Armament Industries, in the U.S., outlined plans for a sniper cartridge driving a 250-grain .338 bullet at 3,000 fps. The sleek FMJ missile would penetrate five layers of body armor at 1,000 meters (1,094 yards).

RAI chose the Rigby case, for its modern rimless design and great capacity. But the .416 was born in a gentler time and configured for a maximum pressure of 47,137 psi.

The new .338 would exceed that limit. To guard against unacceptable case stretching and possible separation, the Rigby’s hull would get a thicker, harder web. RAI contacted BELL (Bell Extrusion Laboratories) of Bensenville, Illinois, to make the brass.

Alas, the first batch didn’t meet specs. In 1984, after building a test rifle and procuring bullets from Hornady, RAI looked to Lapua for help in pushing the project forward. Shortly thereafter, financial difficulties forced RAI out. The .338-416 project was officially cancelled.

Lapua found it worth pursuing. Partnering with Accuracy International, a young British firm, Lapua changed the dimensions and composition of the Rigby hull to brook pressures exceeding 60,000 psi.

Not only was the web thicker, brass hardness was engineered in a gradient from hard to soft, base to mouth. Lapua designed a 250-grain FMJ bullet, designating it the “LockBase B408.”

The .338 Lapua was registered, in 1989, with the CIP (Commission Internationale Permanente pour l’Epreuve des Armes a Feu Portatives). Europe’s CIP is the equivalent of SAAMI (Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers Institute), in the U.S. Both organizations provide manufacturing standards for the firearms industry.

Data for the .338 Lapua specifies a maximum pressure of 60,916 psi (piezo measure). During its development, the 300-grain Sierra MatchKing was not yet in production.

Lapua’s 250-grain LockBase VLD bullet, and the 250 Scenar, met the 3,000-fps target, generating about 4,890 ft-lbs at the muzzle. A hunting load hurling a 250-grain Nosler Partition clocked 2,940 fps. Current loads with 300-grain Sierra MatchKings exit at 2,710 fps. Lapua’s 300-grain Scenars reach 2,750 fps, carry 5,000 ft-lbs.
 
There's some footage on YouTube of a husband/wife pair ringing a 2 square foot plate at 2 miles with a .338 Lapua! The video starts already zoomed way in. When they're done shooting, they zoom back out and WOW! Across a big field or pasture, through the trees, across another field and finally back to the wooded area where they were shooting from... Amazing.
 
338 Lapua is a nice cartridge. Easy to shoot with a muzzle brake and really accurate.
 
Originally Posted By: CT8
338 Lapua is a nice cartridge. Easy to shoot with a muzzle brake and really accurate.


Yup, and as I've discovered, affordable to shoot if you reload
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if you are stingy i.e. value oriented, 300 win mag is also an option.

it all boils down a good bullet
300 win mag you can launch a 200 g bullet at 3000 fps.

That said, I want a 338 lapua, take that back, I need a 338 lapua ;-)

Hey overkill, are you shooting the factory savage barrel?
 
Last edited:
Originally Posted By: stockrex
if you are stringy i.e. value oriented, 300 win mag is also an option.

it all boils down a good bullet
300 win mag you can launch a 200 g bullet at 3000 fps.

That said, I want a 338 lapua, take that back, I need a 338 lapua ;-)

Hey overkill, are you shooting the factory savage barrel?



Yes, and it is surprisingly good. If I shoot it out, I'll probably opt for a Hart or something.
 
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