OK everyone. Looking for some feedback on this one. I've never seen a case do this. Here is the run down on what happened.
Rifle is a new Remington 700 action with Preferred Barrel's 20" heavy barrel chambered in 375 Raptor. Headspace was set using Go/No Go gauges.
All brass used was once fired Lake City that was collected on a civilian shooting range and fired from an AR-10 or bolt action 308, no machine gun brass. Brass was sized and fire formed for 375 Raptor. This is the 3rd firing for the brass.
The load data for the round is proven and was loaded at the same time as all other rounds fired during the firing session. This was the 8th round to be fired through the rifle. Rounds 1 thru 7 were inspected for any pressure signs and none were present. The brass split perfectly into 3 segments at the base and the splits only extended to the top of the webbing. The bolt opened easily after firing. The primer was not punctured by the firing pin.
I have 2 AR-10s and the Rem 700 in 375 Raptor. I've fired hundreds of rounds through the AR-10s, all using LC brass and have multiple reloads on brass. This is the 1st catastrophic failure I've ever had with this chambering.
So...is this just a bad brass?
Do I need to check if the angle cut on the chamber face is too deep and leaving too much of the base unsupported?
I'm trying to decide if I need to scrap all the Lake City brass and go to new commercial brass.
Thanks for the input.
Rifle is a new Remington 700 action with Preferred Barrel's 20" heavy barrel chambered in 375 Raptor. Headspace was set using Go/No Go gauges.
All brass used was once fired Lake City that was collected on a civilian shooting range and fired from an AR-10 or bolt action 308, no machine gun brass. Brass was sized and fire formed for 375 Raptor. This is the 3rd firing for the brass.
The load data for the round is proven and was loaded at the same time as all other rounds fired during the firing session. This was the 8th round to be fired through the rifle. Rounds 1 thru 7 were inspected for any pressure signs and none were present. The brass split perfectly into 3 segments at the base and the splits only extended to the top of the webbing. The bolt opened easily after firing. The primer was not punctured by the firing pin.
I have 2 AR-10s and the Rem 700 in 375 Raptor. I've fired hundreds of rounds through the AR-10s, all using LC brass and have multiple reloads on brass. This is the 1st catastrophic failure I've ever had with this chambering.
So...is this just a bad brass?
Do I need to check if the angle cut on the chamber face is too deep and leaving too much of the base unsupported?
I'm trying to decide if I need to scrap all the Lake City brass and go to new commercial brass.
Thanks for the input.