Teknys
Handloader
- Jan 14, 2008
- 833
- 339
I had commented in a previous post about how consistant the Federal brass I reloaded for a 243 weighed......
Now I definatly had a BRAIN FART :shock:
I can't believe I didn't see this coming. The first bullet I seated, I stopped half way because how much pressure it was taking to seat it. The copper was being pushed up the bullet. I looked at the necks and they all had a square mouth. I dumped all the powder and chamfered inside and outside the mouth of the case. I loaded 43.5gn of RL19 and started to seat 90gn bullets again. They seated a little easier but were requiring much more pull on the press then I've done before. Still had copper slivers and "trash" at the case mouth. I just brushed them all off and away I went. I noticed the wall thickness was much greater than the W-W brass (didn't measure).
This gun the week before with factory ammo was just piling holes on top of each other and banging the gong out to 400yds with out missing a beat.
We couldn't get this reloaded ammo to even stay on the target. AGAIN BRAIN FART :shock: . Sticky bolt lift.... I should have looked at the 1st case not the 20th case. Flat primers, some not even round anymore, ejector marks on every case and also a few had brass melted from gases getting past the primer.
I think that the bullets seating so hard which was removing copper in the process had them so tight that I was getting pressure spikes to who knows how high getting the bullet to launch from the case.
I just measured case length of unfired loaded cases 2.038 - 2.040 and the fired cases were 2.047 - 2.068. I checked some of the bullets in the box and they were .243.
The ammo went into the chamber just fine and smooth, coming out was tight.
Could the wall thicknes gave me an Inside Dia that was too small and then upon "forcing" bullets in and firing, pull the necks out that far?
I took a R-P new bass and seated a bullet right when I got home and it seated smooth with no copper being pushed up, like bullets should seat.
Any ideas??
Now I definatly had a BRAIN FART :shock:
I can't believe I didn't see this coming. The first bullet I seated, I stopped half way because how much pressure it was taking to seat it. The copper was being pushed up the bullet. I looked at the necks and they all had a square mouth. I dumped all the powder and chamfered inside and outside the mouth of the case. I loaded 43.5gn of RL19 and started to seat 90gn bullets again. They seated a little easier but were requiring much more pull on the press then I've done before. Still had copper slivers and "trash" at the case mouth. I just brushed them all off and away I went. I noticed the wall thickness was much greater than the W-W brass (didn't measure).
This gun the week before with factory ammo was just piling holes on top of each other and banging the gong out to 400yds with out missing a beat.
We couldn't get this reloaded ammo to even stay on the target. AGAIN BRAIN FART :shock: . Sticky bolt lift.... I should have looked at the 1st case not the 20th case. Flat primers, some not even round anymore, ejector marks on every case and also a few had brass melted from gases getting past the primer.
I think that the bullets seating so hard which was removing copper in the process had them so tight that I was getting pressure spikes to who knows how high getting the bullet to launch from the case.
I just measured case length of unfired loaded cases 2.038 - 2.040 and the fired cases were 2.047 - 2.068. I checked some of the bullets in the box and they were .243.
The ammo went into the chamber just fine and smooth, coming out was tight.
Could the wall thicknes gave me an Inside Dia that was too small and then upon "forcing" bullets in and firing, pull the necks out that far?
I took a R-P new bass and seated a bullet right when I got home and it seated smooth with no copper being pushed up, like bullets should seat.
Any ideas??