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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
how to remove jammed cartridges from chamber?
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<blockquote data-quote="Innovative" data-source="post: 138463" data-attributes="member: 527"><p>James,</p><p>When you neck size a case and you bump the shoulder back, the "pressure ring" above the web is not getting resized. If you can "feel" your case as it is chambered, you're feeling the pressure ring being press fitted into your chamber. This does nothing to help accuracy, or reliable chambering, or case extraction.</p><p></p><p>The pressure ring eventually becomes the thinnest part of your case, and it's the most likely area for a case separation. You are much more likely to have minimal case stretching with super tight fitting handloads. However, you don't have to go that far. Reliability is a good thing. You may not have experienced these problems being described, but badly resized handloads cause more "fail to chamber" problems than anything, and it makes little or no difference if they're in a different rifle or the same one. </p><p></p><p>- Innovative</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Innovative, post: 138463, member: 527"] James, When you neck size a case and you bump the shoulder back, the "pressure ring" above the web is not getting resized. If you can "feel" your case as it is chambered, you're feeling the pressure ring being press fitted into your chamber. This does nothing to help accuracy, or reliable chambering, or case extraction. The pressure ring eventually becomes the thinnest part of your case, and it's the most likely area for a case separation. You are much more likely to have minimal case stretching with super tight fitting handloads. However, you don't have to go that far. Reliability is a good thing. You may not have experienced these problems being described, but badly resized handloads cause more "fail to chamber" problems than anything, and it makes little or no difference if they're in a different rifle or the same one. - Innovative [/QUOTE]
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how to remove jammed cartridges from chamber?
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