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Thread: Making .40-40 Maynard 1873 ammunition.

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  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Te Awamutu
    Posts
    1,111

    Making .40-40 Maynard 1873 ammunition.

    Like that of the parts and disassembly of the 1873 Maynard I found very little online about how to make 1873 style Maynard cartridges. Here's a few pictures that show the process. This process will follow for many of the Maynard variants of the era with the thick rim.

    Cast chambers to determine your rifles cartridge. I have two barrels which where identically chambered but different bores and twist.
    Ignore "38" vs "40" this rifle was advertised as having a .38 & .40 cal barrel. Both were in fact .40.
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    Look at reference material and looks like we've got .40-40 Maynard 1873. Here's what and original looks like.
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    Need to make rims, and looks like .30-40Krag brass will work well. .303 brass would of possibly worked but I may have needed to slim down the case base dimension a very small amount. I elected to avoid this additional work with .30-40Krag as it is fractionally smaller at the base.
    I scaled these dimensions off some older photos.
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    Trim and expand the .30-40Krag brass. I annealed as well before expanding.
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    Chambering the manufactured cases:


    Proof of concept sorted. Time for mass production. Make a form tool for inside and outside profile. I got these down to about a minute per rim. I made 100 all up because anything less than 100 rounds of each cartridge is emergency levels of austerity.
    Forgive the cuts in the video, I was operating a lathe one handed and couldn't find the in feed lever with my left hand which was hidden behind my phone. So i've edited out the pauses between actions for brevity.

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    Time to test fire - which went perfectly. Good gas seal, cases fire formed quite nicely, they'll likely expand a bit more over time as well.
    Fired cases.
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    Fired vs unfired.
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    Of course to avoid priming these with a hammer (wouldn't be the first time, won't be the last...). I'll need a few shell holders. This I consider is the absolute limit of case size you can fit into a Frankford Armoury hand primer. It is also the lightest shell holder I own. Well, because after making it there's bugger all steel left.
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    Normal shell holder for depriming in press and other assorted press related activities.
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    Last edited by Makros; 02-06-2025 at 02:07 PM.
    Brian, john m, gundoc and 9 others like this.

 

 

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