Only 4 firings on this brass, but I'll run an inside neck reamer through some and see if I get anything.Either that or the pressure ring going thru a donut
Only 4 firings on this brass, but I'll run an inside neck reamer through some and see if I get anything.Either that or the pressure ring going thru a donut
See my post just before yours about 270 Win pressure spike. After re-seating to break the presumed "weld", pressures subsided. I live in dry Nevada, and don't use a swamp cooler or humidifier in my home.I doubt people reloading in dry climates will see the same problem.
Were those all clean case necks when loaded? I believe the best protection against bullets sticking to necks is the natural residue present after firing a case, the stuff many now want to clean out. Today I clean the outside of the necks, but leave the soot inside (maybe a few turns of a nylon brush to smooth it out.) Of course, if you are loading new, unfired cases, or tumble every cycle, this option is off. But probably few here load brand new cases then let them sit for months or years, but tumbled loaded cases might well sit a long time.I just pulled 800-900 .223 bullets that were loaded around 1992.... I saw some so cold fused together the brass was stuck to the bullets after pulling them... These were not new cases when loaded because they were 1989-1992 headstamp Lake City and Winchester brass my father bought at a gun show and sat in his gun safe all these years till he passed away last year... Some were ok , some were way lose but some were frozen together that being most of them.... In my opinion bullet weld does happen , how long it takes for it to happen I don't know... But I can tell you they will at the 30 year mark because I saw it with my own eyes....
Of course I didn't not and my dad didn't load them , he bought them from some guy at a gun show around 1992 , I don't think he knew they were reloads or he wouldn't have got them.... They were all military crimp either Lake City or Winchester brass with the crimps removed , that's how I figured it out.... So I would say they had carbon in the necks when loaded and they looked like they had carbon when they were loaded... I don't think , not sure but I don't think wet tumbling was a big thing back then...Were those all clean case necks when loaded? I believe the best protection against bullets sticking to necks is the natural residue present after firing a case, the stuff many now want to clean out. Today I clean the outside of the necks, but leave the soot inside (maybe a few turns of a nylon brush to smooth it out.) Of course, if you are loading new, unfired cases, or tumble every cycle, this option is off. But probably few here load brand new cases then let them sit for months or years, but tumbled loaded cases might well sit a long time.
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Can you give an example you have in mind of improper storage? For my part, handloads are stored in a cool, dry interior closet, always in MTM (or similar) plastic ammo boxes. I would describe that as ideal.I have several hundred 8X56R that are Nazi headstamped 1938, Upon firing zero issues and zero evidence of any type of corrosion/welding inside the necks. All shoot flawlessly. Same thing for the couple thousand or so LC52 M2 Ball I have been shooting up over the past 10 yrs. Nothing of what you are describing. Maybe those with this welding issue are improperly storing them?
I load up the night before a match but also use imperial dry neck lube inside the necks and never fully clean the inside of the necks, just slightly brush them. I never bring home loaded rounds, maybe it's in my head but I feel that a freshly loaded round is more consistent than one that has been on the shelf a while. Works for me.
Darrin
If your asking me about how the ammo I pulled was stored , it was stored in my father's gun safe in a house that was about 72 degrees year round... He owned a machine shop in South Texas and sweated his entire life for money so his home was never hot nor humid to say the least... Shooting them I didn't notice anything other that they were hot and they were loaded hot but actually pulling them you could see it... Now not all were bad but some were , so I wouldn't say it was a constant... I pulled a factory lake city I had on my bench just to see and for most honestly there wasn't that much difference but the factory LC brass had that tar to sealant around the bullet... But as I said some were stuck were I had to put alot more into pushing the press handle up....
Just by the way I used one of the hornady bullet pullers I bought from pirate ammo and I really liked it... Made pulling 800-900 rifle rounds not that bad... The only ones it slipped on were the really stuck ones and a regrip did the job... Zero problems with the puller or collets and that's a pretty good test...
What was most shocking to me was these reloads were not sealed with tar or anything and everyone of them the powder poured out like water , no clumping etc... I did shoot a few over my crono and saw nothing out of the ordinary except they were loaded to 5.56 specs and were hot.... To me it just wasn't worth the chance of something happening over it so I pulled them for the bullets for a rainy day...
I have several hundred 8X56R that are Nazi headstamped 1938, Upon firing zero issues and zero evidence of any type of corrosion/welding inside the necks. All shoot flawlessly. Same thing for the couple thousand or so LC52 M2 Ball I have been shooting up over the past 10 yrs. Nothing of what you are describing. Maybe those with this welding issue are improperly storing them?
In my opinion, even if the core is steel, if copper plated or copper jacketed, you still end up with only brass alloy and copper in contact with each other. The core material is irrelevant.Put a magnet against a bullet or two. You may find that these 8X56R rounds use bullets with thinly copper plated mild steel jackets. Much European military ammunition of this era used steel components whenever possible, especially a few years later during WW2 when copper and zinc became scarce resources. If this applies, they would likely behave differently from modern match bullets and brass.