Difference between revisions of ".17 Hornet"

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Revision as of 14:56, 18 July 2015

 .17 Hornet Cartridge .17 Hornet Ballistics tables Cartridges 
-
.17 Hornet
Type Rifle, Rimfire
Country of Origin United States
Specifications
Parent Case .22 Hornet
Bullet Ø .172 in (4.4 mm)
Neck Ø .193 in (4.9 mm)
Shoulder Ø .288 in (7.3 mm)
Base Ø .299 in (7.6 mm)
Rim Ø .350 in (8.9 mm)
Rim Thickness .065 in (1.7 mm)
Case Length 1.400 in (35.6 mm)
Full Length varies according to bullet loaded
Rifling twist 1-10
Primer small rifle
Production & Service
Designer P. O. Ackley
Design Date 1950s
Manufacturer Hornady
Ballistic Performance Sampling
Bullet Wt./type Velocity Energy
20 gr (1 g) BT 3,515 ft/s (1,071 m/s) 548.8 ft·lbf (744.1 J)
25 gr (2 g) HP 3,176 ft/s (968 m/s) 560 ft·lbf (760 J)
30 gr (2 g) HP 2,975 ft/s (907 m/s) 589.7 ft·lbf (799.5 J)

Source: Hodgdon

The .17 Hornet is a .17 caliber centerfire rifle cartridge originally offered as a wildcat cartridge made by P.O. Ackley in the early 1950s. He created this non-factory (wildcat) offering by simply necking-down the .22 Hornet to .17 caliber and fire-forming the resized cases in his new chamber design. The result was a small quiet cartridge capable of high velocity. Ackley mentions it as one of the most balanced of the .17 cartridges of his time; likely, this is still true. [1]

Sixty years later, Hornady Manufacturing Company (Grand Island, Nebraska, USA) has taken Ackley's idea into a commercial product with a similar cartridge; the 17 Hornady Hornet uses a 20 grain (1.3 gram) "Superformance" V-max projectile at a published velocity of 3650fps (1113 metre/second). [2]

However, the new standardized ammunition/brass is not built to exactly the same dimensional specifications as the original wildcat or the dimensions listed on this page. Hornady's standard has a shorter body with less taper and shorter overall case length while the overall loaded length remains that of the original .22 Hornet (in order to fit the standard Hornet Magazines). Shooters wishing to use the .17 Hornady Hornet in a .17 Ackley Hornet chamber will experience the bullet jumping to the rifling and may lose some the inherent accuracy for which the cartridge has been known.

It has been reported the .17 Hornady Hornet uses a thicker rim than the original Hornet case. However, the 9th Edition of the Hornady "Handbook of Cartridge Reloading" shows them to be the same (.065 inches); measuring the rims of actual factory cases shows the Hornady Handbook to be correct. Moreover, Ackley's "Pocket Manual for Shooters and Reloaders" shows the rim thickness for his wildcat to range between .069" and .063"... also, consistent with the Hornady Handbook. Both cartridges head-space on this rim.

While the Ackley cartridge uses a 30 degree shoulder angle and the Hornady is 25 degrees, its longer shoulder is accommodated by Ackley's longer case body. Fireforming will move the Hornady's shoulder forward at the expense of neck length.

Yet there is a final size issue: according to Ackley's Manual, his wildcat cartridge is only .289" over the shoulder while the Hornady factory round measures .294". This is the reason the Hornady's case capacity is almost identical to that of the Ackley. Since there is five thousands less taper in the case body, the new .17 Hornady Hornet cases may not fit an Ackley chamber without full-length resizing.

Existing rifles chambered for the Ackley wildcat can probably have their barrels set back one turn and rechambered to the new .17 Hornady Hornet... which meets the SAAMI (Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute) standard for the .17 Hornet. This would fix the bullet jump issue and improve ammunition availability with little risk of diminished performance.

SAAMI specifications for the .17 hornet.

See also

References

  1. Cartridges of the World 8th Edition, Book by Frank C. Barnes, DBI Books, 1997, ISBN 0-87349-178-5
  2. "17 Hornet 20 gr V-MAX™ Superformance® Varmint".Retrieved 29 August 2012..

External links

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