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Its hard to find an AR chambered in 223. In fact I have never seen one.Some of the later replies seem to only be focusing on potential for catastrophic failure/injury. The potential is there, if only a slight chance, up to you if it is worth the risk to use them.
With higher pressure you're inducing more stress, and with an AR that leads to premature failure of parts. Especially the bolt and extractor.
What is nowadays?It is nowadays, which is why some of us asked what is stamped on the barrel.
I've got an AR platform chambered in .223. I've been told, 1) don't shoot 5.56 in it because 5.56 is loaded to higher pressures and it's unsafe. 2) no worries go ahead and shoot no problems. Lots of knowledge and experience here. What say you??
Some of the later replies seem to only be focusing on potential for catastrophic failure/injury. The potential is there, if only a slight chance, up to you if it is worth the risk to use them.
With higher pressure you're inducing more stress, and with an AR that leads to premature failure of parts. Especially the bolt and extractor.
Those are typically 5.56 even though the lower is stamped .223. Your barrel should say C MP 5.56 Nato between the gas block and muzzle if the barrel hasn't been replaced.It's a Colt Match Target. Nothing stamped on the barrel unless it's under the handguard, but the lower is stamped 223
My response was worded poorly. I was going along the lines that even if you choose to believe there is no risk of injury associated to the use of 5.56 in an actual .223 chamber, you are more likely to have greater wear and tear on the firearm from the higher pressure.This is the inquiry..
Risk is somewhat nebulous, and addressed as a possibility for catastrophic failure because that is what the ultimate concern is. If you want to see high chamber pressures, you can find it with Weatherby factory ammunition.
SAAMI pressures are a measuring standard to determine tolerances in action strength. If you actually read the posted article and the data that was supplied there, you would see the charts and what the pressure curves with different actions and chambers are. That was done with equipment made to test the physics of what goes on in a rifle chamber, not some hyperbole from rumors.
I would submit that the scare of unsafe stress on an action between the 2 chamberings is more a concern of barrel erosion and accuracy of one ammunition type over the other...
My response was worded poorly. I was going along the lines that even if you choose to believe there is no risk of injury associated to the use of 5.56 in an actual .223 chamber, you are more likely to have greater wear and tear on the firearm from the higher pressure.
I'll have to read that article further when I get a chance. Quick glance seems to defy what I've always been told was the gospel.
Exactly.This is the inquiry..
Risk is somewhat nebulous, and addressed as a possibility for catastrophic failure because that is what the ultimate concern is. If you want to see high chamber pressures, you can find it with Weatherby factory ammunition.
SAAMI pressures are a measuring standard to determine tolerances in action strength. If you actually read the posted article and the data that was supplied there, you would see the charts and what the pressure curves with different actions and chambers are. That was done with equipment made to test the physics of what goes on in a rifle chamber, not some hyperbole from rumors.
I would submit that the scare of unsafe stress on an action between the 2 chamberings is more a concern of barrel erosion and accuracy of one ammunition type over the other...
K, the barrel is stamped C MP 5.56 NATO 1/7. So from what I'm hearing it is actually chambered for 5.56 not just a 223 chambering.
Ha!
This is a long standing debate. I recall reading a good article on it years ago. I hunted it down so that I could share it. It was done by Luckygunner Labs. They did a nice investigation, including chamber pressures and gun to gun variation.
https://www.luckygunner.com/labs/5-56-vs-223/
My interpretation of the study is that it really does not matter when it comes to chamber pressure.
That said, there is an entire other difference which is barrel twist.
.223 rifles normally come with a 1:10 or 1:11 twist for lighter (55g and less), faster projectiles.
5.56 rifles normally come with a 1:7 or 1:8 twist for slower, heavier (55g and more) projectiles.
Most .223 ammo has lighter projectiles and most 5.56 has 62g penetrators.
So to me its semantics. If I want a 45g bullet for a 1:11 twist rifle, both the rifle and the ammo will likely be called .223 (but if they are called 5.56, I am OK with that.
If I want to shoot a heavier bullet in a 1:7 twist rifle, both cartridge and rifle will probably be stamped 5.56, but I am OK if they say something different.
If I shoot heavy bullets, which fly slower, in a 1:11 twist barrel, they may not have enough spin to stabilize. This can lead to poor groups and key-holes on the paper target.
If I shoot lighter bullets, which fly faster, in a 1:7 twist barrel, I have read, that they can spin so fast that they fling off their copper jacket. I found this hard to believe until I was at the 100 yard range and found a bunch of what looked to be .223 copper jackets all about 30 yards down range of the firing line. So maybe that is exactly what I witnessed..... maybe. Who ever fired them was no longer there that day so I could not ask them what they were shooting.
Now that's funny.The biggest problem with debates such as this is how little people read what is being discussed. Case in point, check post #19...