You bought a used rifle or pistol. Now prove the caliber
Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2026 11:39 pm
Friday Night Reloading
You bought a used rifle or pistol. Now prove the caliber — completely and correctly.
Many military surplus firearms have been altered during their lifetime. Some were arsenal-converted to different cartridges. Some were rebarreled during depot rebuilds. Some were commercially rechambered after import. Private owners have rechambered rifles to wildcats or “improved” versions. Barrel stamps are not guarantees. Import marks are not guarantees. Even matching serial numbers are not guarantees. The chamber itself is the only reliable authority.
The objective is to determine exactly what cartridge the chamber is cut for, confirm it mechanically, verify it under pressure, and document it in a way you can defend later.
Start with safety
Remove the magazine if present. Open the action. Visually inspect the chamber. Physically confirm it is empty. Keep live ammunition out of the work area during identification.
Step 1 — Record what the firearm claims it is
Before measuring anything, photograph and record:
Barrel caliber marking
Receiver marking
Importer marking
Any “conversion” stamps
Serial numbers
Proof marks
This establishes what the firearm claims to be. If your measurements disagree, you will have documentation of the discrepancy.
Step 2 — Clean the chamber completely
Carbon and fouling distort measurements and interfere with gauges.
Use a chamber brush and solvent. Clean thoroughly. Dry completely. Do not leave pooled oil before casting or gauging.
Step 3 — Understand the chamber and throat
The chamber is the enlarged rear portion of the barrel that holds the cartridge case.
The throat (also called the leade) is the short smooth section immediately in front of the chamber where the bullet transitions before it engages the rifling.
When making a chamber cast, you are capturing:
The chamber body
The neck portion
The shoulder (if bottleneck)
The throat entrance
The very beginning of the rifling
Step 4 — Make a Cerrosafe chamber cast
Tools required:
Cerrosafe alloy
Heat source
Small ladle or spoon
Cleaning rod
Tight patch
Timer
Micrometer (preferred)
Calipers
Camera
Procedure:
1. Plug the bore
Insert a tight patch from the chamber side so it sits just forward of the throat. You can feel the slight step where the chamber ends and rifling begins. Place the patch just ahead of that step.
2. Warm the chamber slightly
Warm metal allows better flow and fewer voids.
3. Melt and pour Cerrosafe
Fill the chamber area completely.
4. Let it solidify
Wait several minutes until fully firm.
5. Remove the cast
Gently tap it out from the muzzle end using the rod.
Cerrosafe timing
Cerrosafe shrinks slightly as it first cools. At approximately 1 hour after pouring, it returns to true chamber dimensions. After that it slowly expands.
Best practice: set a timer and measure the cast as close to 60 minutes after pouring as practical.
Step 5 — Measure the cast (this defines the cartridge)
Use a micrometer where precision matters.
Measure and record:
Rim diameter (if rimmed)
Rim recess depth
Base diameter
Body diameter
Shoulder diameter
Distance from base to shoulder
Shoulder angle (estimate)
Neck diameter
Total chamber/case length
Freebore length
Throat diameter
These dimensions together uniquely identify the chamber. One measurement alone is not sufficient.
Step 6 — Match measurements to standards
Use references in this order:
SAAMI chamber drawings
CIP TDCC tables
Cartridges of the World
Model-specific military manuals
Dimension tables to narrow candidates
Start with:
Base diameter
Rim diameter
Case length
Shoulder position
These typically narrow the field dramatically. Confirm with neck diameter and shoulder geometry.
Do not identify a cartridge based on bore diameter alone.
Alternate narrowing tool — using AI as a helper, not authority
Once you have recorded all measurements, you can enter the key dimensions into an AI tool to help narrow possible candidates. This is not a substitute for SAAMI or CIP data. It is a sorting tool.
Provide the AI with:
Base diameter
Rim diameter (or rimless)
Case length
Shoulder location from base
Neck diameter
Shoulder angle (approximate)
Bottleneck or straight-wall
Ask it to list possible cartridges that match those dimensions within reasonable tolerance.
AI can quickly generate a shortlist of likely cartridges based on dimensional similarity. You then verify each candidate against official drawings.
Never treat AI output as definitive. Use it to isolate possibilities, then confirm against published standards and chamber drawings.
Step 7 — Confirm mechanically with headspace gauges
Tools:
GO gauge
NO-GO gauge
FIELD gauge (strongly recommended for used firearms)
Procedure (bolt-action example):
Clean chamber again.
Remove firing pin assembly if possible.
Insert GO gauge. Bolt should close easily.
Insert NO-GO gauge. Bolt should not close fully.
Insert FIELD gauge. Bolt must not close. If it does, stop.
Snap caps and dummy rounds are not headspace gauges.
Step 8 — Slug the bore
Tools:
Soft lead slug
Light oil
Brass or wood rod
Micrometer
Procedure:
Lightly oil bore.
Tap slug into muzzle.
Push through steadily.
Measure across widest diameter.
Record groove diameter. This confirms correct bullet diameter and identifies common milsurp variations.
Step 9 — Pressure confirmation using fire-formed brass (Cream of Wheat method)
Once chamber ID and headspace are confirmed, you may create a chamber-formed case to confirm real-world geometry.
This step verifies that the chamber behaves as expected under pressure and produces a reference case for sizing.
Materials:
Correct brass for the identified cartridge
Primers
Powder scale
Appropriate fast-burning powder suitable for light forming
Cream of Wheat
Small funnel
Thin wax plug
Eye protection
Case preparation:
Inspect brass carefully.
Ensure it chambers freely.
Prime normally.
Charging:
Weigh a conservative forming charge appropriate to the cartridge class.
Pour powder into case.
Fill nearly full with Cream of Wheat.
Do not pack tightly.
Seal mouth with thin wax layer.
Firing:
Wear eye protection.
Fire in safe direction.
Expect mild report.
Inspection:
Check for normal extraction.
No case head bulging.
No bright ring above case head.
No neck splitting.
Primer not excessively flattened.
Measure and record:
Shoulder position using comparator
Fired neck outside diameter
Case length
Base diameter above extractor groove
If fire-formed geometry matches the Cerrosafe cast and published standards, your determination is confirmed under pressure.
Step 10 — Document the final determination
In your inspection document record:
Claimed chambering from markings
Cerrosafe cast measurements
Time measured (for example: 60 minutes post-pour)
References used
AI shortlist (if used)
Final cartridge determination
Headspace results
Bore slug diameter
Fire-formed case measurements
Example conclusion statement:
“Chamber confirmed as ______ based on Cerrosafe cast measured at 60 minutes post-pour and matched to SAAMI/CIP dimensions. Headspace verified with GO/NO-GO/FIELD gauges. Bore slug measured at ______. Fire-formed case measurements consistent with chamber geometry.”
Stop conditions
If cast dimensions do not clearly match a known standard, stop.
If headspace fails, stop.
If fire-formed brass shows abnormal expansion or pressure signs, stop.
If markings and measurements cannot be reconciled, stop.
The chamber is the authority. Measure it, confirm it, verify it under pressure, and record it before loading anything.
You bought a used rifle or pistol. Now prove the caliber — completely and correctly.
Many military surplus firearms have been altered during their lifetime. Some were arsenal-converted to different cartridges. Some were rebarreled during depot rebuilds. Some were commercially rechambered after import. Private owners have rechambered rifles to wildcats or “improved” versions. Barrel stamps are not guarantees. Import marks are not guarantees. Even matching serial numbers are not guarantees. The chamber itself is the only reliable authority.
The objective is to determine exactly what cartridge the chamber is cut for, confirm it mechanically, verify it under pressure, and document it in a way you can defend later.
Start with safety
Remove the magazine if present. Open the action. Visually inspect the chamber. Physically confirm it is empty. Keep live ammunition out of the work area during identification.
Step 1 — Record what the firearm claims it is
Before measuring anything, photograph and record:
Barrel caliber marking
Receiver marking
Importer marking
Any “conversion” stamps
Serial numbers
Proof marks
This establishes what the firearm claims to be. If your measurements disagree, you will have documentation of the discrepancy.
Step 2 — Clean the chamber completely
Carbon and fouling distort measurements and interfere with gauges.
Use a chamber brush and solvent. Clean thoroughly. Dry completely. Do not leave pooled oil before casting or gauging.
Step 3 — Understand the chamber and throat
The chamber is the enlarged rear portion of the barrel that holds the cartridge case.
The throat (also called the leade) is the short smooth section immediately in front of the chamber where the bullet transitions before it engages the rifling.
When making a chamber cast, you are capturing:
The chamber body
The neck portion
The shoulder (if bottleneck)
The throat entrance
The very beginning of the rifling
Step 4 — Make a Cerrosafe chamber cast
Tools required:
Cerrosafe alloy
Heat source
Small ladle or spoon
Cleaning rod
Tight patch
Timer
Micrometer (preferred)
Calipers
Camera
Procedure:
1. Plug the bore
Insert a tight patch from the chamber side so it sits just forward of the throat. You can feel the slight step where the chamber ends and rifling begins. Place the patch just ahead of that step.
2. Warm the chamber slightly
Warm metal allows better flow and fewer voids.
3. Melt and pour Cerrosafe
Fill the chamber area completely.
4. Let it solidify
Wait several minutes until fully firm.
5. Remove the cast
Gently tap it out from the muzzle end using the rod.
Cerrosafe timing
Cerrosafe shrinks slightly as it first cools. At approximately 1 hour after pouring, it returns to true chamber dimensions. After that it slowly expands.
Best practice: set a timer and measure the cast as close to 60 minutes after pouring as practical.
Step 5 — Measure the cast (this defines the cartridge)
Use a micrometer where precision matters.
Measure and record:
Rim diameter (if rimmed)
Rim recess depth
Base diameter
Body diameter
Shoulder diameter
Distance from base to shoulder
Shoulder angle (estimate)
Neck diameter
Total chamber/case length
Freebore length
Throat diameter
These dimensions together uniquely identify the chamber. One measurement alone is not sufficient.
Step 6 — Match measurements to standards
Use references in this order:
SAAMI chamber drawings
CIP TDCC tables
Cartridges of the World
Model-specific military manuals
Dimension tables to narrow candidates
Start with:
Base diameter
Rim diameter
Case length
Shoulder position
These typically narrow the field dramatically. Confirm with neck diameter and shoulder geometry.
Do not identify a cartridge based on bore diameter alone.
Alternate narrowing tool — using AI as a helper, not authority
Once you have recorded all measurements, you can enter the key dimensions into an AI tool to help narrow possible candidates. This is not a substitute for SAAMI or CIP data. It is a sorting tool.
Provide the AI with:
Base diameter
Rim diameter (or rimless)
Case length
Shoulder location from base
Neck diameter
Shoulder angle (approximate)
Bottleneck or straight-wall
Ask it to list possible cartridges that match those dimensions within reasonable tolerance.
AI can quickly generate a shortlist of likely cartridges based on dimensional similarity. You then verify each candidate against official drawings.
Never treat AI output as definitive. Use it to isolate possibilities, then confirm against published standards and chamber drawings.
Step 7 — Confirm mechanically with headspace gauges
Tools:
GO gauge
NO-GO gauge
FIELD gauge (strongly recommended for used firearms)
Procedure (bolt-action example):
Clean chamber again.
Remove firing pin assembly if possible.
Insert GO gauge. Bolt should close easily.
Insert NO-GO gauge. Bolt should not close fully.
Insert FIELD gauge. Bolt must not close. If it does, stop.
Snap caps and dummy rounds are not headspace gauges.
Step 8 — Slug the bore
Tools:
Soft lead slug
Light oil
Brass or wood rod
Micrometer
Procedure:
Lightly oil bore.
Tap slug into muzzle.
Push through steadily.
Measure across widest diameter.
Record groove diameter. This confirms correct bullet diameter and identifies common milsurp variations.
Step 9 — Pressure confirmation using fire-formed brass (Cream of Wheat method)
Once chamber ID and headspace are confirmed, you may create a chamber-formed case to confirm real-world geometry.
This step verifies that the chamber behaves as expected under pressure and produces a reference case for sizing.
Materials:
Correct brass for the identified cartridge
Primers
Powder scale
Appropriate fast-burning powder suitable for light forming
Cream of Wheat
Small funnel
Thin wax plug
Eye protection
Case preparation:
Inspect brass carefully.
Ensure it chambers freely.
Prime normally.
Charging:
Weigh a conservative forming charge appropriate to the cartridge class.
Pour powder into case.
Fill nearly full with Cream of Wheat.
Do not pack tightly.
Seal mouth with thin wax layer.
Firing:
Wear eye protection.
Fire in safe direction.
Expect mild report.
Inspection:
Check for normal extraction.
No case head bulging.
No bright ring above case head.
No neck splitting.
Primer not excessively flattened.
Measure and record:
Shoulder position using comparator
Fired neck outside diameter
Case length
Base diameter above extractor groove
If fire-formed geometry matches the Cerrosafe cast and published standards, your determination is confirmed under pressure.
Step 10 — Document the final determination
In your inspection document record:
Claimed chambering from markings
Cerrosafe cast measurements
Time measured (for example: 60 minutes post-pour)
References used
AI shortlist (if used)
Final cartridge determination
Headspace results
Bore slug diameter
Fire-formed case measurements
Example conclusion statement:
“Chamber confirmed as ______ based on Cerrosafe cast measured at 60 minutes post-pour and matched to SAAMI/CIP dimensions. Headspace verified with GO/NO-GO/FIELD gauges. Bore slug measured at ______. Fire-formed case measurements consistent with chamber geometry.”
Stop conditions
If cast dimensions do not clearly match a known standard, stop.
If headspace fails, stop.
If fire-formed brass shows abnormal expansion or pressure signs, stop.
If markings and measurements cannot be reconciled, stop.
The chamber is the authority. Measure it, confirm it, verify it under pressure, and record it before loading anything.