diversmith Posted October 8, 2011 Share Posted October 8, 2011 Just for kicks I tried dropping some factory ammo into my EGW 7 hole case gauge and the RWS and Blazer brass dropped right in and out but Federal Champion wouldn't drop in all the way but they have all functioned fine thru my stock 35????? Are the EGW CASE gauges on the tight side? I don't have any other gauges in .40 to compare it against. I know that glock chambers are on the looser side? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The_Vigilante Posted October 8, 2011 Share Posted October 8, 2011 Your barrel is the ultimate case gauge-not the EGW case gauge. Not sure whether the EGW case gauges are on the tight side-sure someone will chime in with the answer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bigpops Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 Short answer - Yes. The EGW and the new Double Alpha case guage are tighter than most, especially when testing for a Glock. I have rounds that will only fit halfway in the DA and fire fine in the wifes 34. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gng4life Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 Even other gauges from Wilson and Dillon are little tight. I usually get 2 per hundred that won't drop through them (9mm and .40) but when I drop them in my barrel, no problem. Only the grossly larger ones will not go in anything, which are tossed anyway. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
warpspeed Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 (edited) The SAAMI specs have a tolerance. The EGW gauge is probably made to the tight side of the spec. Edited October 9, 2011 by warpspeed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gng4life Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 Where are the tolerances listed? When I looked at the SAMMI specs, they have exact numbers, no variance or tolerance with case sizes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
warpspeed Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 Where are the tolerances listed? When I looked at the SAMMI specs, they have exact numbers, no variance or tolerance with case sizes. All numbers listed have a tolerance. Usually listed as + or - but not both. For 9mm Luger, the spec lists "UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED BODY DIA -.007(0.18)" So my guess is that EGW is cutting the holes a few 1/1000th under the max diamter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveU Posted October 9, 2011 Share Posted October 9, 2011 (edited) Zero 180 JHP bullets (alone) won't fall through my EGW gauge. They fall through my dillon gauge. I use the EGW but I just know the rounds at 1.185 hit right at the extractor groove and are fine in my barrel. When I use my dillon gauge sometimes a case passes that gets stuck in my barrel. My .02 Edited October 11, 2011 by Surge Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gng4life Posted October 10, 2011 Share Posted October 10, 2011 The SAAMI specs have a tolerance. The EGW gauge is probably made to the tight side of the spec. Found it. I had the drawings without the tolerances listed, thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raz-0 Posted October 10, 2011 Share Posted October 10, 2011 EGW's gauges are cut with a clymer chamber reamer, so look up the dimensions of that and you have your dimensions. For .40, I have a dillon, a wilson, and an EGW (actually 3, the 4 caliber one, a 5 hole 40 and a 50 hole 40) as one of my guns has a tight chamber, and I wanted something that would be a good proxy. From my experience, the dillon is built like they picked the nearest sized drill bit out of the box and made a hole in the thing. It is very loose to the point that something fitting in it guarantees me nothing in anything but a box stock M&P (probably also a glock). The wilson is TIGHT. To the point that several varieties of commercial ammo won't fit in it. Which makes it totally useless to me. The EGW is like a tight match barrel, and has been reliable in chamber checking loaded rounds for me. The 50 hole block is awesome as It speeds up the process dramatically, and I can stripe the case heap in it very easily. If you want something that doesn't produce too many false positives for a box stock glock, the dillon might be the right thing for you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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