I have a blueprinted Remington 700 action with a M24 Bartlein barrel chambered in 223. I had it rechambered after shooting about 500 rounds through it because I was experiencing case/head separation on brass after about 3 reloads. My measurements on fired brass indicated excessive headspace/an excessively deep chamber. I took it back to the gunsmith who originally chambered it, and he cut a new chamber (although he said it was in range).
After getting the gun back I proceeded to workup a ladder firing 75 gn Hornady Match BTHPs over loads of Varget. I used new/unfired Lapua brass for this. I determined that 23.5 gn of Varget produced the best accuracy with an average muzzle velocity of 2845 fps out of a 26" barrel. There were no pressure signs.
Measuring the case length from the base to shoulder (using a Hornady comparator) on the once fired brass I found a range of lengths. I started a thread here to discuss this and was informed that many of the cases may not have been fully expanded/stretched upon firing because of some of the light loads in the ladder. It was suggested that I neck size only for the next reloads and see what measurements I get after the second firing. Taking that advice I loaded up 50 neck sized cases to find what jump the bullet liked, and I headed to the range.
When I fired the neck sized cases I immediately found some difficulty closing the bolt on a few cases, and extraction on several cases was very difficult. I literally had to hit the bolt rearward with a strike from the palm of my hand to get the cases out. The primers on these cases looked fine (still rounded at the edge) and there was no evidence of extractor marks. Looking at some of the cases I can see what appears to be a fine line in about the same location where I experienced case/head separation previously with the old chamber. Again, this is on the second reload of new Lapua brass that was neck sized only.
Measuring case length from the base to the shoulder on 10 of the twice fired cases I get an average length of 1.560", with a maximum length measurement of 1.565"
Measuring case length from the base to the shoulder on 10 of the once fired neck sized cases I get an average of 1.551" with a maximum length measurement of 1.553".
Based on those measurements I increased the average base to shoulder measurement by 0.009" with the second firing of neck sized cases. This seems excessive to me.
I want to full-length size the 50 remaining neck sized cases to avoid the extraction issues that I experienced. However, I have no idea what my target base to shoulder target length should be based on the variance between the once fired and twice fired cases. Should I set up my FL die to bump the shoulder on the maximum length case 0.001", or should I target bumping the average length by 0.001"?
Should I be concerned about the difference in measurements between the once fired and twice fired cases? The appearance of the faint line near the case web has me worried.
Any opinions and guidance here is appreciated. For what its worth, the dies are Redding and the press is a Forester Co-Ax. Powder charges are thrown with an A&D scale accurate to 0.02 gn.
After getting the gun back I proceeded to workup a ladder firing 75 gn Hornady Match BTHPs over loads of Varget. I used new/unfired Lapua brass for this. I determined that 23.5 gn of Varget produced the best accuracy with an average muzzle velocity of 2845 fps out of a 26" barrel. There were no pressure signs.
Measuring the case length from the base to shoulder (using a Hornady comparator) on the once fired brass I found a range of lengths. I started a thread here to discuss this and was informed that many of the cases may not have been fully expanded/stretched upon firing because of some of the light loads in the ladder. It was suggested that I neck size only for the next reloads and see what measurements I get after the second firing. Taking that advice I loaded up 50 neck sized cases to find what jump the bullet liked, and I headed to the range.
When I fired the neck sized cases I immediately found some difficulty closing the bolt on a few cases, and extraction on several cases was very difficult. I literally had to hit the bolt rearward with a strike from the palm of my hand to get the cases out. The primers on these cases looked fine (still rounded at the edge) and there was no evidence of extractor marks. Looking at some of the cases I can see what appears to be a fine line in about the same location where I experienced case/head separation previously with the old chamber. Again, this is on the second reload of new Lapua brass that was neck sized only.
Measuring case length from the base to the shoulder on 10 of the twice fired cases I get an average length of 1.560", with a maximum length measurement of 1.565"
Measuring case length from the base to the shoulder on 10 of the once fired neck sized cases I get an average of 1.551" with a maximum length measurement of 1.553".
Based on those measurements I increased the average base to shoulder measurement by 0.009" with the second firing of neck sized cases. This seems excessive to me.
I want to full-length size the 50 remaining neck sized cases to avoid the extraction issues that I experienced. However, I have no idea what my target base to shoulder target length should be based on the variance between the once fired and twice fired cases. Should I set up my FL die to bump the shoulder on the maximum length case 0.001", or should I target bumping the average length by 0.001"?
Should I be concerned about the difference in measurements between the once fired and twice fired cases? The appearance of the faint line near the case web has me worried.
Any opinions and guidance here is appreciated. For what its worth, the dies are Redding and the press is a Forester Co-Ax. Powder charges are thrown with an A&D scale accurate to 0.02 gn.