cdherman
Well-Known Member
Ok, long story. Started in 2003 when I purchased an old sporterized 6.5x55 swede. I got 100 rds Lapua brass at the time and started developing loads.
I noticed early on, many of my first loadings had flattened primers. I always assumed this was bad of course. I also noticed then already, that the flattened primers were noticeably extended from the base of the cartridge. And this occurred with relatively light loads.
Well, I was staying well below max book loads, and I think those book loads are already low for old M94 mauser actions, so these were light loads. But I was not shooting long range, I found a decent combo and the old girl sort of languished. Loaned out many times to needy friends. About 30 rounds of brass have gone missing (biggest insult you can do me, is borrow my gun and not return the Lapua brass)....
Fast forward. I have decided to mess with the old girl. I am high tech now, a Hornady OAL tool, etc.
I dug out my brass. 3 baggies. One is unfired. These measure 1.776" base to datum using the .375" insert. The second is once fired brass. These ALSO measure 1.776" base to datum. No cartridge elongation. The third baggie, labled 2-3x (?) fired, measures 1.783", or about .007 cartridge elongation.
Here's the question, and its kind of rhetorical since I think I know already.
But can light loads be so light that they do not push the cartridge head back? And perhaps that explains the brass that has been 1x fired that is the same base to datum measure as unfired brass? And might that explain also the strange appearing flattened primers in low pressure loads that I saw years ago?
Finally, I wonder if this also could be evidence of a rough chamber? Something that would "hold" the brass, rather than let it push back? Just musing....
Regardless, I tried to find some other threads there and wherever via google to no avail. Suspect this has already been discussed somewhere, but here is another go round........
I noticed early on, many of my first loadings had flattened primers. I always assumed this was bad of course. I also noticed then already, that the flattened primers were noticeably extended from the base of the cartridge. And this occurred with relatively light loads.
Well, I was staying well below max book loads, and I think those book loads are already low for old M94 mauser actions, so these were light loads. But I was not shooting long range, I found a decent combo and the old girl sort of languished. Loaned out many times to needy friends. About 30 rounds of brass have gone missing (biggest insult you can do me, is borrow my gun and not return the Lapua brass)....
Fast forward. I have decided to mess with the old girl. I am high tech now, a Hornady OAL tool, etc.
I dug out my brass. 3 baggies. One is unfired. These measure 1.776" base to datum using the .375" insert. The second is once fired brass. These ALSO measure 1.776" base to datum. No cartridge elongation. The third baggie, labled 2-3x (?) fired, measures 1.783", or about .007 cartridge elongation.
Here's the question, and its kind of rhetorical since I think I know already.
But can light loads be so light that they do not push the cartridge head back? And perhaps that explains the brass that has been 1x fired that is the same base to datum measure as unfired brass? And might that explain also the strange appearing flattened primers in low pressure loads that I saw years ago?
Finally, I wonder if this also could be evidence of a rough chamber? Something that would "hold" the brass, rather than let it push back? Just musing....
Regardless, I tried to find some other threads there and wherever via google to no avail. Suspect this has already been discussed somewhere, but here is another go round........