50 years never had a bullet drop into the neck. Chambers cut by one of the best gunsmiths. Seems like a meaningless criteria. Both of my varmint rifles easily shoot under 0.400" with a good bullet.In your experience dave, should a bullet be able to drop down a once fired piece of brass?
FIRED brass Webster...I've never done it till tonight. (With caliber size bullets too!50 years never had a bullet drop into the neck. Chambers cut by one of the best gunsmiths. Seems like a meaningless criteria. Both of my varmint rifles easily shoot under 0.400" with a good bullet.
thanks for being such a great contribution. kudos
Welp
Well, I thought it was funny.thanks for being such a great contribution. kudos
what cartridge is that btw? looks interestingWell, I thought it was funny.
9.3X62. 30-06 necked to .366" (With a .284" dropped in it for the video, lol)what cartridge is that btw? looks interesting
pretty cool looking, bet its a hammer on game9.3X62. 30-06 necked to .366" (With a .284" dropped in it for the video, lol)
Just verified with one case. A slip fit. Not possible to fall in. 1 thou bigger it might have fallen in. I don't worry about small details as long as the rifle shoots small. Why would you want the bullet to fall in if you have not sized it yet to change the dimension? Some people think a bullet base has to reach the bottom of the neck. Who made this up. A 55 gr bullet in my 6BRX is seated about 0.050" into the neck and it shoots .250-.350" groups regularly. Not bad for a hunting rifle.FIRED brass Webster...I've never done it till tonight. (With caliber size bullets too!![]()
why do you think that is? do you anneal? do you think your necks are thinning out over time to allow more clearance?For the sake of the discussion ; and another country heard from . I shoot TR ; .308 , with a No-turn chamber , and anneal after every firing . A bullet will not drop into a fired case on "New" brass , but it will on brass that has been fired more than six cycles . I only use Lapua SRP brass , and haven't seen any variation in this regardless of Lot number . Just my own experience tracking this to satisfy my own curiosity .
it was MY understanding that if your bullet does not fall inside a fired piece of brass that you do not have proper neck clearance in the chamberFor the sake of the discussion ; and another country heard from . I shoot TR ; .308 , with a No-turn chamber , and anneal after every firing . A bullet will not drop into a fired case on "New" brass , but it will on brass that has been fired more than six cycles . I only use Lapua SRP brass , and haven't seen any variation in this regardless of Lot number . Just my own experience tracking this to satisfy my own curiosity .
you have it backwards in regards to the spring back, no idea why you are getting less springback when annealed. That is 180 out. One way to test your annealing is to take a sized case and pull the bullet measuring the before and afterward. A work hardened case will not spring back less than an annealed case willOnly thing I can think of is that the maybe the brass wasn’t annealed from the factory, and then the multiple step down bushing ops probably hardened the crap out of the necks and was getting some aggressive spring back.
Work Hardening
When a cartridge is fired, the thin case neck is exposed to very high pressures. Easily enough to cause the case to expand beyond its ultimate limit and fracture. But the chamber prevents that from happening by limiting the amount of expansion that can occur. In other words, the neck expands until it hits the chamber wall. At that point, there is no more space to expand into. This keeps the case neck from failing. When the pressure drops, the case springs back. But even though the case is protected from ultimate failure by the chamber wall, the brass is still exposed to very high forces, and will undergo slight plastic deformation - you can't have that much pressure in the case without moving a little metal. When brass is allowed to plastically deform, it work hardens. The more you "work" it, the more it hardens. Remember, hardness means yield strength.
from my understanding, everything I have read says that annealing reduces spring back. even the author from your article you cited says that annealing reduces spring back…….you have it backwards in regards to the spring back, no idea why you are getting less springback when annealed. That is 180 out. One way to test your annealing is to take a sized case and pull the bullet measuring the before and afterward. A work hardened case will not spring back less than an annealed case will
from Damon Cali's piece on annealing
The Science of Cartridge Brass Annealing
edited to fix link
yep I had it backwards, thanks for my learning something new todayand from what I posted in this thread, proves it even further. so maybe you have it backwards?
Lou is not wrong.
(BTW, Lou is one of the nicest and most generous guys you will meet. He is always willing to help a rookie and I hope we don't take him out of context. He is also one of the most experienced guys in the game, so keep that in mind too. Some folks on here are as good and better than he is, but most are not.)
What folks are doing here is jumping out of context with the neck clearance context.
Not all chambers are fit for all purposes.
So, sometimes this drop a bullet back into a fired case is a bad sign, but, someone could also come up with a context where a tight neck chamber doesn't do it and run off with that as a general answer.
At time, we are discussing SAAMI necks, at others we are into custom tight necks.
Let us all be clear when we are in which context or this forum will start smelling like SH and break down into ego battles rather than be constructive.