Posted on 10/29/2016 5:17:13 PM PDT by MtnClimber
Significant differences. .308 Win has a tighter chamber than 7.62x51 NATO. The GO/NO-GO gauges are different for each chamber. I had a bad experience closing the bolt on a 7.62x51 NATO into a .308 Win chamber. Bang! Fortunately, the muzzle was pointed downrange and the bolt lugs locked sufficiently to restrain the brass. I've never used anything but .308 Win since and have had no problems. The box of 7.62x51 NATO remains in the safe and unused after 18 years.
Question
Ammunition, .223 & 5.56mm
Answer
All Bushmaster rifles are chambered to accept 5.56mm ammunition and always have been. The NATO Spec 5.56mm chambers have a longer “leade” or throat than the SAAMI Spec .223 caliber chambers which have about half of the leade or throat of the 5.56mm chambering. While it is safe to fire both 5.56mm and .223 caliber ammunition in our rifles, the 5.56mm ammunition should not be fired in rifles chambered in .223 caliber as they will develop very high pressures.
http://support.bushmaster.com/?title=General_Information/Ammunition,_.223_%26_5.56mm
That's one of the reasons I still have only bolt action .308 rifles. My wife has a Ruger Deerfield .44Mag semi-auto. It is patterned after the Mini-14 with a rotary mag like the 10-22. The gas system is designed for 200 to 250 gr bullets. Any less and it won't cycle. Heavier will risk damage to the op-rod. She tried a "cowboy load" of 44mag designed for the single action shooters. It went bang fine. Couldn't find the brass. Cycled the bolt manually. Ping. Not enough gas. Replaced with PMC 240 gr JHP. Perfect cycling.
Are you a teen?
The article states that Armalite has fired millions of 5.56 rounds out of .223 rifles over 22 years with no catastrophic failures.
Thanks, I just looked at my Bushmaster and it does have the imprint; .223 and 5.56. This thread has been great as I had no idea about the difference in rounds.
Thanks for the ping.
5.56mm
The only prblems I’ve ever had between the two cartridges was about 12 years ago. I am a firearms instructor and armorer for a state law enforcement agency. During the Iraq war at times it was damned difficult to lay your hands on .223 for our Ruger mini 14’s for in-service requals. Back-ordered to the twelfth of never. Being desperate at one time we received an order of milspec 5.56 nato. After reviewing the armorers data on the mini 14’s barrels I accepted the shipment. Come qualification time the rounds chambered just fine. no failures to extract or eject. The problem was harder primers. Within a couple of hours all but 1 of 9 in service rifles had broken firing pins. I ended up sending back the balance of the shipment and told our supplier “.223 or nothing”. I then spent the next day OFF the range replacing firing pins. Grrr!
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