Remington factory load that very slightly gas cut my bolt face, sticking with reloads going forward!Possibly. But may not of been with handloads, could of been factory.
Remington factory load that very slightly gas cut my bolt face, sticking with reloads going forward!Possibly. But may not of been with handloads, could of been factory.
someone tried to sell me this rifle before. this is a sign of high pressure with home loads.![]()
Had very similar with a sako .223 Varmint I bought on hereYes it’s gas cutting from either worn primer pockets or hot loads as it cut at least a couple of mm quite deep into bolt face.
Gun went straight back when I’d seen it plus if I remember right the barrel was burnt out it was light a smooth bore.was on a tikka m595 varmint..
And 12 o'clock on the one below.Only thing I see is top cart 2nd from left , could have been pos tight'ish ! looking at extraction mark at 6 o'clock.
Hi. Here's a good article on pressure signs..I’m pretty new to reloading
That's just what i though. The one bottom right looks like it's been used as a snap cap.omething seems a little off
Hi. My name is Foxyboy and I am a reloader. Reloaders are friends………Something seems a little off .
Those cases don't look as though they're from the same box /batch . Did you buy these as once fired ? The reason I ask is some are giving the impression of lose primer pockets or not haveing been seated consistently , none of the primers are exhibiting high pressure.
And 12 o'clock on the one below.
It's highly satisfying developing a good load , nice one . Now book yourself into an addiction clinic with the rest of us .
Err. Does that suggest you are one of those ‘warrior” types?Rattling the chicken bones to read the runes, there does seem to be something going on here. Inconsistent certainly.
From top left, reading left to right.
1. OK but not much more to go regards pressure. Primer flat but OK. Extruded all the way to the outer ring (of two) of the primer pocket.
2. Ejector or extractor has scraped around and a chunk missing from the rim (hard extraction ?). Is this a right handed bolt ? Primer flat but OK, as 1.
3. OK, seemingly a little bit less pressure.
4. Small sign of primer blow-by soot, but maybe imagining that. Primer seemingly a little protruding after the event but not so flat.
5. Seemingly OK but I see some small circular scraping marks all the way around the headstamp.
6. Headstamp beginning to flatten. Primer flat as per 1 and 2. Small crape marks again.
7.As per 6.
8. A bit like 4 but no primer leakage. Firing pin strike a bit wonky. Almost looks like it took a second go to fire it off.
All firing pin strikes look OK and centred, I've seen far worse.
On the assumption that this is your original brass, not some "once fired allegedly", are you batching it and rotating it so that each case is fired the same number of times ? Because it doesn't look like that. 6 and 7 look considerably more used.
There is inconsistency in the primer signs. What make are they, and do you mix them up ? Because some are softer than others. None of them look too worrying to me re: pressure, actually 3,4,5 and particularly 8 seem rather light (more rounded).
What are you using to seat them (press or hand tool), and do you do any primer pocket prep, at least scrape them out. It can be deceptive, you can flatten primers just by seating them with too much or too little force, particularly if the pockets are inconsistent/dirty/not quite exactly the right size for your particular primers.
From my armchair.
Rattling the chicken bones to read the runes, there does seem to be something going on here. Inconsistent certainly.
From top left, reading left to right.
1. OK but not much more to go regards pressure. Primer flat but OK. Extruded all the way to the outer ring (of two) of the primer pocket.
2. Ejector or extractor has scraped around and a chunk missing from the rim (hard extraction ?). Is this a right handed bolt ? Primer flat but OK, as 1.
3. OK, seemingly a little bit less pressure.
4. Small sign of primer blow-by soot, but maybe imagining that. Primer seemingly a little protruding after the event but not so flat.
5. Seemingly OK but I see some small circular scraping marks all the way around the headstamp.
6. Headstamp beginning to flatten. Primer flat as per 1 and 2. Small crape marks again.
7.As per 6.
8. A bit like 4 but no primer leakage. Firing pin strike a bit wonky. Almost looks like it took a second go to fire it off.
All firing pin strikes look OK and centred, I've seen far worse.
On the assumption that this is your original brass, not some "once fired allegedly", are you batching it and rotating it so that each case is fired the same number of times ? Because it doesn't look like that. 6 and 7 look considerably more used.
There is inconsistency in the primer signs. What make are they, and do you mix them up ? Because some are softer than others. None of them look too worrying to me re: pressure, actually 3,4,5 and particularly 8 seem rather light (more rounded).
What are you using to seat them (press or hand tool), and do you do any primer pocket prep, at least scrape them out. It can be deceptive, you can flatten primers just by seating them with too much or too little force, particularly if the pockets are inconsistent/dirty/not quite exactly the right size for your particular primers.
From my armchair.
The cases were purchased new but this was their third firing and they had been used in one of my other rifles.Something seems a little off .
Those cases don't look as though they're from the same box /batch . Did you buy these as once fired ? The reason I ask is some are giving the impression of lose primer pockets or not haveing been seated consistently , none of the primers are exhibiting high pressure.
And 12 o'clock on the one below.
It's highly satisfying developing a good load , nice one . Now book yourself into an addiction clinic with the rest of us .
No these were fired from a Tikka T3x CTR 223 8” twist 24” barrel.good evening are you using a remington rifle by any chance?
All the same batch of brass but third firing, all the same S&B primers seated with a Lee Hand primer.Rattling the chicken bones to read the runes, there does seem to be something going on here. Inconsistent certainly.
From top left, reading left to right.
1. OK but not much more to go regards pressure. Primer flat but OK. Extruded all the way to the outer ring (of two) of the primer pocket.
2. Ejector or extractor has scraped around and a chunk missing from the rim (hard extraction ?). Is this a right handed bolt ? Primer flat but OK, as 1.
3. OK, seemingly a little bit less pressure.
4. Small sign of primer blow-by soot, but maybe imagining that. Primer seemingly a little protruding after the event but not so flat.
5. Seemingly OK but I see some small circular scraping marks all the way around the headstamp.
6. Headstamp beginning to flatten. Primer flat as per 1 and 2. Small crape marks again.
7.As per 6.
8. A bit like 4 but no primer leakage. Firing pin strike a bit wonky. Almost looks like it took a second go to fire it off.
All firing pin strikes look OK and centred, I've seen far worse.
On the assumption that this is your original brass, not some "once fired allegedly", are you batching it and rotating it so that each case is fired the same number of times ? Because it doesn't look like that. 6 and 7 look considerably more used.
There is inconsistency in the primer signs. What make are they, and do you mix them up ? Because some are softer than others. None of them look too worrying to me re: pressure, actually 3,4,5 and particularly 8 seem rather light (more rounded).
What are you using to seat them (press or hand tool), and do you do any primer pocket prep, at least scrape them out. It can be deceptive, you can flatten primers just by seating them with too much or too little force, particularly if the pockets are inconsistent/dirty/not quite exactly the right size for your particular primers.
From my armchair.