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Mark Buettgen's son works for Federal and Mark told me that there is NO difference in 205's and 205 M's. However, the M's get a visual inspection and the 205's do not.Ain't a secret Dusty, it is the gospel.
Exactly right. Hes not the only primer rep that has told us that.Mark Buettgen's son works for Federal and Mark told me that there is NO difference in 205's and 205 M's. However, the M's get a visual inspection and the 205's do not.
I like this:
https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1102/1102.1644.pdf
some quotes:
"match primers are not always more consistent than non-match types"
'total mass and explosive mass tested peak pressure magnitudes are well correlated with measured primer masses"
CCI 450 or at least a certain lot of CCI 450's would not correlate for mass & pressure.
".....since most of the slopes of peak pressure vs. primer mass are between 8 and 20 psi/mg achieving variations in peak primer blast pressure below 10 psi will likely require sorting primers into groups on the order of 1/4 - 1/2 mg …. this requires a scale with a precision of .1 milligram"
This type of scale would be an analytic laboratory scale - not likely to be on some shooter's bench.
Interesting observation about the black stuff - most likely heavy metal residues from explosive primer compounds. I believe almost all of the back residue cleaned out of rifle barrels is not carbon.
Visual inspection of zillions of primers might cause some psychologic impairment.
Balances with 0.1 mg readability, which usually means accuracy in the ~0.2 mg range, are not unheard of in the reloading game, but can be pretty pricey. I have a very nice Mettler analytical balance that can be set to 0.1 mg or 0.01 mg readability and have used it to weight-sort a box of Fed 205 primers. My intention is compare velocities obtained with two groups of 10 primers each representing the highest/lowest regions within the overall range, although I haven't actually done the velocity test as yet. The overall weight range for 100 primers spanned only 6.9 mg (0.2340 g to 0.2409 g), so a balance with 1.0 mg readability would not be satisfactory for this purpose.
Although some of the black residue deposited in the barrel after shooting is certainly due to primer components, it is unlikely that it represents more than a small fraction of the total. The median weight value of the small rifle primers I checked was 0.2375 g, or about 3.7 gr, which also includes the weight of the cup and anvil and is consistent with Dave's weights posted above in this thread. Dave's data indicate that the average weight of priming compound that was combusted and actually left the cup/anvil was ~0.022 g, or about 0.34 gr. Thus, the weight amount of priming compound would typically represent well below 1.0 % of a typical .308 Win powder charge weight, for example. I can't state with certainty exactly what percentage of the residue we refer to as "carbon" is actually carbon (as opposed to metals), but it's very likely that a large portion of it is coming from combusted powder.
While not totally worthless, read Courtney's "papers" with a critical eye. This one in particular is sloppy when compared to stuff that was done in the 70s. Why they'd spend all that money and not do it right is beyond me. Courtney is a creative and smart guy, but runs experiments on a shoestring budget, are generally not peer reviewed, and it shows.
That particular paper of Courtney's was rendered essentially invalid because of the low resolution of his balance.
Simply switching powders without changing primers can result in a huge difference in the amount of soot left in the barrel, again suggesting it is largely due to incomplete combustion of the powder, not the priming compound. Powders such as Varget and H4895 leave a huge amount of residue as compared to something like a comparable weight of N140. It would be pretty easy to test how much the black soot left in a barrel was due solely to priming compound by firing off a few cases that contained nothing more than a primer.
To his credit, Mr. Courtney clearly points out the limitations of the balance used. Within the confines of using total primer weight, a 1 mg readability (~2 mg resolution) balance would probably be more than sufficient. However, it was the difference in total mass between primers that was attributed to differences in the mass of priming compound, which is a much smaller figure. The study would have certainly benefitted from the use of a higher resolution balance.
Nonetheless, my belief is that a statistically significant number of velocity measurements is the best readout for such a test. There is no good reason to use a more sensitive readout in light of other limiting factors such as balance resolution. If a reliable chronograph cannot detect a significant difference in velocity between primers of varying mass given a sufficient number of samples, then it is pointless to suggest that any difference observed on the target would be statistically significant either.
By analogy, I have observed that case weight correlates relatively well with internal volume. For .223 Rem cases, the difference between the heaviest and lightest cases within a single Lot# can easily be shown to cause velocity variance of as much as 20-25 fps, a value readily detected with a good chronograph. Likewise, if the heaviest and lightest primers within a Lot# are capable of causing a noticeable difference on the target, one would expect to be able to detect the difference at the velocity level. If any velocity difference was so small as to escape detection with a good chronograph, it would be very difficult to explain exactly how any difference observed on the target was related to a difference in primer mass. Thus, it would seem as though using measured velocity would be the much simpler approach to testing primers for correlating any relationship between primer mass and performance. I'm not really clear on why Mr. Courtney went the transducer route with this work.
My guess is that Dr. Courtney (PhD, Physics, MIT) wanted to remove variables that are involved with the cartridge load process that would affect velocity. By using a transducer to measure the actual psi/mg, all the attendant load stuff would be skipped and an actual evaluation of primer consistency would be determined by measurement of blast pressures. Table 2 shows a bunch of primers were weighed to within .1 mg, total mass and pressures. Pressure tests using total primer mass (fig. 3) and mass loss by detonation for Fed. 210M primers, (fig. 4) were shown with weights to .1 mg. I think the study was aimed at shooters rather than engineers/scientists. If Dr. Courtney conducted this study using any grant or public funding budget considerations would be in effect.
Low velocity spreads would introduce the entire load process and environmental factors into consideration. My thinking is that velocity consistency would not be greatly affected by minute primer explosive charge variations measured in .1 mg increments because of the tiny quantity of the primer action compared to the entire load process. I liked the study, in part, because I could easily understand it and other confusing and unnecessary factors were omitted.
All this fussing over primers would be sort of negated should the carefully selected primers produce vertically strung groups ("observed on the target") having low velocity spreads and standard deviations.