Alex, I decided to leave it. I simply removed the carbon and copper. The nick is very shallow so I don't forsee it being an issue.
I am/was trying to extend the brass life. Brass is Lapua. I am quite pleased with the amount of life I got out of the brass. It really is time to retire the brass as I am very confident that the case head separation was due to the volume of firing the case had on it. I didn't keep track of how many times each case was fired. It could have been that this particular case was fired MANY more times than the rest.
All other rounds fired just fine and were sized at the same time so it wasn't excessive headspace. I have done that before in my tactical rifle and scrapped about 80 pieces of brass. That incident was about 0.008-0.010 of shoulder bump, which resulted in case head separation. I normall bump my shoulders 0.002".
I am usually good with identifying case splits, I cull out loose primer pockets and also try to inspect for signs of incipient case head separation. Nothing really shouted out at me at the time I was doing brass prep. I don't do the paper clip method. I usually try to look for faint lines just above the case head. This was the first case out of about 300 cases in circulation that has done this. I am just glad it wasn't worse.
I am/was trying to extend the brass life. Brass is Lapua. I am quite pleased with the amount of life I got out of the brass. It really is time to retire the brass as I am very confident that the case head separation was due to the volume of firing the case had on it. I didn't keep track of how many times each case was fired. It could have been that this particular case was fired MANY more times than the rest.
All other rounds fired just fine and were sized at the same time so it wasn't excessive headspace. I have done that before in my tactical rifle and scrapped about 80 pieces of brass. That incident was about 0.008-0.010 of shoulder bump, which resulted in case head separation. I normall bump my shoulders 0.002".
I am usually good with identifying case splits, I cull out loose primer pockets and also try to inspect for signs of incipient case head separation. Nothing really shouted out at me at the time I was doing brass prep. I don't do the paper clip method. I usually try to look for faint lines just above the case head. This was the first case out of about 300 cases in circulation that has done this. I am just glad it wasn't worse.