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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
ejector marks
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<blockquote data-quote="climb-101" data-source="post: 1306666" data-attributes="member: 31921"><p>have you tried shooting over a chronograph to see how fast its going. I was fighting ejector marks on one of my guns and I was well below book minimum. When i shot it over the crono, i was all the way up around the max speed which means for what ever reason the pressure was up. </p><p></p><p>I ended up switching to a slower burning powder plus backing it down a little more. I get a very faint ejector mark now. Unless you look hard you cant find it. </p><p></p><p>I thought seating the bullet out further as long as its not jammed into the lands helped reduce the pressure since there was more case volume. once its jammed into the lands it increases pressure a lot but i could be wrong on this. How did you find the lands on your gun, you may actually be into the lands, I had the problem when i used on of the hornady gauges.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="climb-101, post: 1306666, member: 31921"] have you tried shooting over a chronograph to see how fast its going. I was fighting ejector marks on one of my guns and I was well below book minimum. When i shot it over the crono, i was all the way up around the max speed which means for what ever reason the pressure was up. I ended up switching to a slower burning powder plus backing it down a little more. I get a very faint ejector mark now. Unless you look hard you cant find it. I thought seating the bullet out further as long as its not jammed into the lands helped reduce the pressure since there was more case volume. once its jammed into the lands it increases pressure a lot but i could be wrong on this. How did you find the lands on your gun, you may actually be into the lands, I had the problem when i used on of the hornady gauges. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
ejector marks
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