Need some pointers from those that have gotten into the nitty gritty of chamber dimensions and how everything works to see if I'm thinking correctly.
Ran into an issue late last fall when shooting Pop's model 71 348. Was shooting a couple shots right before season started and was also double checking things with the chronograph. Was getting WILD velocity swings with just a couple shots and I quit. We are talking like 150 fps.
I put it away and figured I'd figure it out later. One day just sitting around I got an idea to check something.....I took the cases I'd just fired last time (not resized) and tried by hand to put one of the Swift A-Frame bullets I was shooting into them. They are TIGHT. Basically will not start in without a LOT of force. I then tried the same bullet in once fired cases that I had been shooting Hornady 200 grain bullets in. Extremely TIGHT.
I then took a 200 gr Hornady bullet and tried the same thing in both the cases that had the Hornady's fired through them, and the ones that I'd fired the Swift bullets through. TIGHT.
I'm thinking there is a carbon ring built up in the neck area of the chamber restricting the neck brass from expanding and causing spikes in pressure and velocity. Any other non sized, fired case in any caliber, I can take any bullet for that cartridge and it will fall into the case until you resize the neck.
Ran into an issue late last fall when shooting Pop's model 71 348. Was shooting a couple shots right before season started and was also double checking things with the chronograph. Was getting WILD velocity swings with just a couple shots and I quit. We are talking like 150 fps.
I put it away and figured I'd figure it out later. One day just sitting around I got an idea to check something.....I took the cases I'd just fired last time (not resized) and tried by hand to put one of the Swift A-Frame bullets I was shooting into them. They are TIGHT. Basically will not start in without a LOT of force. I then tried the same bullet in once fired cases that I had been shooting Hornady 200 grain bullets in. Extremely TIGHT.
I then took a 200 gr Hornady bullet and tried the same thing in both the cases that had the Hornady's fired through them, and the ones that I'd fired the Swift bullets through. TIGHT.
I'm thinking there is a carbon ring built up in the neck area of the chamber restricting the neck brass from expanding and causing spikes in pressure and velocity. Any other non sized, fired case in any caliber, I can take any bullet for that cartridge and it will fall into the case until you resize the neck.