View attachment 1082683 270 Win Ruger American...Nosler Brass, now shot x4, annealed after x2...110 gr TTSX, 56.0 gr Re-17 (manuals say 52.5-58 gr)...3258 fps...COAL 3.28...FL sized with forster die with neck honed to .004” under OD of neck of loaded round. These are consecutive rounds fired this afternoon....I’ve never seen signs of excessive pressure before, but I’ve probably loaded/shot less than a thousand or so rounds. I’m thinking this load would not normally generate excessive pressure, therefore, I must have done something to compromise my brass- any thoughts/comments appreciated. Thanks.[/QUOT
View attachment 1082683 270 Win Ruger American...Nosler Brass, now shot x4, annealed after x2...110 gr TTSX, 56.0 gr Re-17 (manuals say 52.5-58 gr)...3258 fps...COAL 3.28...FL sized with forster die with neck honed to .004” under OD of neck of loaded round. These are consecutive rounds fired this afternoon....I’ve never seen signs of excessive pressure before, but I’ve probably loaded/shot less than a thousand or so rounds. I’m thinking this load would not normally generate excessive pressure, therefore, I must have done something to compromise my brass- any thoughts/comments appreciated. Thanks.
You don"t "have a problem" except bad information.
There's nothing wrong with your gun, your dies nor your brass.
This is perfectly normal, the result of following the instructions included with your dies and found in your reloading manuals.
Your choices are;
-throw away your cases after 3 reloads
-learn to set your dies properly
-buy other dies, brand doesn't matter
-learn to take a chamber cast and measure your chamber
-take the time to ask very specific questions and learn WHY it happened instead of asking for kneejerk "answers" and weeding thru folks' guesses. You will have to test stuff yourself.
THE ABSOLUTE ANSWER is that you're over-sizing
Period
THE ABSOLUTE REASON is die settings and quite probably die fit.
It's on you to figure out why, or change your ways.
Casehead separations are like flat tires...... 99% of the time quite innocuous. It's that one percent that gets ya.
Please monitor case length (some call this "COAL" altho that acronym is also commonly used for cartridge overall length) but the thing you need to understand is that you are sizing the shoulders back....... squeezing the cases up thru the die like toothpaste from the tube, and the cases are lengthening. They have to get quite long for them to start crimping in most factory chambers but it _can_ happen..... and this crimping effect will add to your problem by driving presures to damaging levels.
PLEASE.... monitor case growth. Once cumulative growth reaches or exceeds .006 throw the cases away.
Others will argue that cumulative growth of .012 or .015 is still safe but in any case, your goal is to minimize case lengthening or growth.
Case growth is the very first atep in understanding the process and throwing away those cases aftet .006 growth is SAFE, which in my world supercedes all.
Be Safe
Al