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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bullet Jam Increasing Pressure?
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<blockquote data-quote="Lefty7mmstw" data-source="post: 711790" data-attributes="member: 48043"><p>I've seen some rounds in 7mm actually push the bullets back they were jambed hard enough. I guess it depends on the situation but you would conceivably do casing damage jambing the round from extraction if pulled unfired, slip the bullet in more, engrave the bullet more, or jamb the action from closing because of the bullet engraving force being to hard to overcome closing the bolt. </p><p>I'd guess once firmly jambed letting the bullet have no run it wouldn't matter as much for pressure as for usability with the gun.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lefty7mmstw, post: 711790, member: 48043"] I've seen some rounds in 7mm actually push the bullets back they were jambed hard enough. I guess it depends on the situation but you would conceivably do casing damage jambing the round from extraction if pulled unfired, slip the bullet in more, engrave the bullet more, or jamb the action from closing because of the bullet engraving force being to hard to overcome closing the bolt. I'd guess once firmly jambed letting the bullet have no run it wouldn't matter as much for pressure as for usability with the gun. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Bullet Jam Increasing Pressure?
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