Hello all,
Hoping for some help with an infuriating feeding problem. When I moved to Iowa I re-barreled my 308 to 358 Win so I could continue to hunt with it.
As a 308, this gun had no feeding or ejection problems. Unfortunately as a 358, it now has a huge problem: when the bolt is run quickly, the cartridges jam against the mouth of the chamber. See the below photos:


And the following videos (Youtube links):
358 Feeding Issue Video 1
358 Feeding Issue Video 2
Defiance Deviant action, Wyatt's BDL cut, Wyatt's mag box and follower, red hawk rifles BDL bottom metal, pac-nor 358 win barrel. It shoots great and headspaces perfectly so the barrel doesn't seem to be the issue. When the bolt is run slowly, it works fine. When I cycle 308 rounds through the rifle, they feed and eject perfectly no matter hard hard I run the bolt (although I obviously don't fire them).
Things I've tried:
- Bending mag box lips narrower (made the rounds pop out too soon which caused a different type of jam because the back end kicks up and the front nose-dived below the chamber and jammed)
- Bending mag box lips wider (made the problem worse/jams more frequent)
- Tried both round nose and spire point bullets (round nose are worse, but SP exhibit the same issue, just less frequently)
- Replaced wyatt's box, spring, and follower with Remington factory mag box, spring, and follower (no change, same issue)
- Bending spring to put more force on the nose of the cartridge (no effect)
- Making the spring weaker by grinding off some material at the bends (no effect)
- Simulated a stronger spring by pushing the spring upwards with my fingers from the bottom while running the bolt (no effect)
My assessment: I think that because the bullet and neck of the cartridge are so fat, when it hits the feed ramp, it tips up much higher than a 308. And because the round is so short, the tip of the bullet doesn't enter the chamber until it has already tipped up too far, at which point it jams.
So I think I know what is happening, but I have no idea how to fix it.
I know, I know - buy a Tikka
. I love me my Tikkas but would love to get this rifle back up and running. Anyone have any ideas? Am I just screwed and need to abandon the hope of using the 358 with this setup???
Hoping for some help with an infuriating feeding problem. When I moved to Iowa I re-barreled my 308 to 358 Win so I could continue to hunt with it.
As a 308, this gun had no feeding or ejection problems. Unfortunately as a 358, it now has a huge problem: when the bolt is run quickly, the cartridges jam against the mouth of the chamber. See the below photos:


And the following videos (Youtube links):
358 Feeding Issue Video 1
358 Feeding Issue Video 2
Defiance Deviant action, Wyatt's BDL cut, Wyatt's mag box and follower, red hawk rifles BDL bottom metal, pac-nor 358 win barrel. It shoots great and headspaces perfectly so the barrel doesn't seem to be the issue. When the bolt is run slowly, it works fine. When I cycle 308 rounds through the rifle, they feed and eject perfectly no matter hard hard I run the bolt (although I obviously don't fire them).
Things I've tried:
- Bending mag box lips narrower (made the rounds pop out too soon which caused a different type of jam because the back end kicks up and the front nose-dived below the chamber and jammed)
- Bending mag box lips wider (made the problem worse/jams more frequent)
- Tried both round nose and spire point bullets (round nose are worse, but SP exhibit the same issue, just less frequently)
- Replaced wyatt's box, spring, and follower with Remington factory mag box, spring, and follower (no change, same issue)
- Bending spring to put more force on the nose of the cartridge (no effect)
- Making the spring weaker by grinding off some material at the bends (no effect)
- Simulated a stronger spring by pushing the spring upwards with my fingers from the bottom while running the bolt (no effect)
My assessment: I think that because the bullet and neck of the cartridge are so fat, when it hits the feed ramp, it tips up much higher than a 308. And because the round is so short, the tip of the bullet doesn't enter the chamber until it has already tipped up too far, at which point it jams.
So I think I know what is happening, but I have no idea how to fix it.
I know, I know - buy a Tikka