In my effort to drive my 222 bullets "a little bit faster", to minimize wind deflection during 300 yd F-class, I noticed that my once fired Lapua brass is difficult to slide into my hand priming shellholder and my press's shellholder. Even though the loads were under max @ 49,000psi, (according to several manuals and Quickload), they were pretty hot, and I assume this means these cases are now trash.
My questions to all of you are:
1) Is using the shellholder fit an accurate indicator of over-pressure loads?
2) If the max pressure for 222 Rem is 53,664psi (according to Quickload), at what pressure will the case become "deformed", essentially ruining the case for future accuracy?
As usual, thanks for your experience and wisdom Guys!
#1, yes
#2, never, this has nothing to do with accuracy. Cases don't "deform" any differently under this pressure nor does brass "flow" under pressure.
Quite simply, casehead expansion IS the proper way to find max loads for YOUR setup..... the setup being a combination of your case dimensions, your barreled action and your particular brand/lot of brass. Casehead expansion overrides, supersedes, negates, eclipses ANYTHING a reloading program, the experience of your friends or any reloading manual has to say.... casehead expansion is the direct reading, the real deal, the ONLY accurate representation of what's going on.
And quite specifically this is also where the most accurate rifles on the planet operate. BR's and PPC's LIVE here....
The extra velocity won't do you any good as far as bucking wind but it may well be that your most accurate loads live up in this high-pressure area. Generally speaking Bench Rest competition takes place in that narrow window between accuracy and case failure, that point at which the primer pockets actually loosen and start to leak. If you decide to work in this high-pressure node you may well choose to learn about how to get that one, final firing out of your cases before throwing it out....BEFORE you etch your boltface. Getting into the habit of firing primers until they leak will wreck your bolt face over time.
I've got boxes of throw-away varmint ammo loaded with shimmed or glued in primers. Cigarette papers, aluminum foil, Bob-N-Roys primer sealant compound, finger nail polish, JB Weld...
And in 25yrs of running cases up to "leaking primers" I've never etched a bolt face. I've blackened a few, even got a couple with miniscule gas scoring marks visible under a loupe.... but never damaged one.
Fuh'GEDDABout "Copper Units Of Pressure" and sliding cylinders and proof actions, "bomb chambers" and measurements of barrel expansion, strain gages and crush gauges........ in the real world, companies test to casehead expansion.
It's REAL, it's ACCURATE and most importantly it's SAFE.
You've just encountered what may end up being the most important accuracy tool in your tool box.