??? 50,000 PSI should have done the job. Are you shooting light loads?In the past, I've fire formed 500 .243 winchester cases in my Savage 12FV 243 AI with every one forming to satisfaction. Recently I purchased 100 pieces of new Srarline brass and had three or four rounds that after three firings had very rounded, unformed shoulders. (See case on right) Wondering if anyone has had this issue. Thanks.
Yes Sir. My builder recommends this for blowing out A I brass. So far I have had great results doing it this way.Hey Bill, you're saying .020 into the lands?
Thanks Bill. Did some weighing and didn't find any significant difference with the rounded shoulder cases. Some of the "good" cases were heavier and some lighter and some about the same.Compare the weight of the problem cases against the good ones. You might find the problem cases are heavier, maybe thicker. Thus not forming.
Sorry, not Bill, 6.5Thanks Bill. Did some weighing and didn't find any significant difference with the rounded shoulder cases. Some of the "good" cases were heavier and some lighter and some about the same.
Looks like a standard 243 starting load @ Hodgdon.42 grains of H414 and 70 grain Sierra Blitz Kings
modulus of elasticity- Cartridge Brass-
Material is 70 copper/30 zinc with trace amounts of lead & iron , called C26000. Material starts to yield at 15,000 PSI when soft (annealed), and 63,000 PSI when hard.
Material yields, but continues to get stronger up to 47,000 PSI when soft, and 76,000 PSI
when work hardened. Modulus of Elasticity is 16,000,000 PSI. This means to pull a 1.000 inch long strip to 1.001 inch long induces a 16,000 PSI stress.
So if you pull a 1.000 inch strip to 1.005 inch long, you get about 76,000 PSI, which is the max obtainable.
Yes, I meant max load for the parent, standard cartridge. Yes, that's how I do it. Works just dandy......even a max book load for the standard cartridge is mild load in the AI case.You must be joking, or I'm misreading your post. Start at the max and go up? Maybe you mean the max for the unformed case size, but still . . . . If this is how you do it, I don't want to be next to you on the line.![]()
Looks like a standard 243 starting load @ Hodgdon.
If the rifle is a 243 AL Low Pressure problem. . Powder needs a magmum powder, also.
When i shoot 68 Berger or 70 Sierra with IMR 4350 in a standard 243 Win, the necks doesnt even expand, unless a maximum load.
More powder. and hard jam.In the past, I've fire formed 500 .243 winchester cases in my Savage 12FV 243 AI with every one forming to satisfaction. Recently I purchased 100 pieces of new Srarline brass and had three or four rounds that after three firings had very rounded, unformed shoulders. (See case on right) Wondering if anyone has had this issue. Thanks.
After trying more powder and .020 into lands these few cases still had rounded shoulders so they are going to the scrap pile. Thanks for all the suggestions.
I used 45 gr of H414. Max for 243 win is 46. I agree on a couple pieces in the trash. I'll use them for practice when I start annealing.How much more did you put in and was it still h414?
I used varget to make 243ai. I did use 90% load for regular 243, not ai with 87gr sierras jammed in the rifling .010”. What I understand is jamming is required to hold the case in line and up against the bolt face so it can’t wiggle while forming. Took two firings for the sharp shoulders, but the first ones were nowhere near as rounded as what you have. DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE TRYING WHAT I DONE. Might not be the most proper way, but it worked and continues to work for me.
Varget is a hair faster than h414, so there may be something to using a spicier powder. But, a couple pieces of brass in the garbage vs something broke, not the end of the world.
annealing
From Olin Brass
modulus of elasticity- Cartridge Brass-
Material is 70 copper/30 zinc with trace amounts of lead & iron , called C26000. Material starts to yield at 15,000 PSI when soft (annealed), and 63,000 PSI when hard.
Material yields, but continues to get stronger up to 47,000 PSI when soft, and 76,000 PSI
when work hardened. Modulus of Elasticity is 16,000,000 PSI. This means to pull a 1.000 inch long strip to 1.001 inch long induces a 16,000 PSI stress.
So if you pull a 1.000 inch strip to 1.005 inch long, you get about 76,000 PSI, which is the max obtainable.