I am dumb...but can somebody please clue me in on how exactly "moisture" in the chamber causes a primer to end up pierced??????? I've been at this for quite a while now, fired many a rifle in weather that surely had to cause chambers to be anywhere from very slightly moisturized to slap ass soaked and everything in between....I have never pierced, blown or blanked any primers ever due to moisture.
As an aside...
Any moisture present in the chamber will occupy the otherwise 'empty' space that the brass would 'expand' to fill, upon primer detonation...
So, if that 'empty' space isn't 'empty', then the brass has to 'work harder' to displace that moisture & seal off the chamber...
That struggle between expanding brass and moisture will serve to spike pressure. The degree to which pressure spikes, is not equal, since the 'empty space' volume is contingent upon the amount of moisture present...
Same goes for the bullet/ lands. If water gets down the barrel, all of a sudden a 'jumped' bullet acts more like a 'jammed' one. Ie., the 'initial start pressure' to get the bullet on its way down the barrel, is increased. Viola, pressure spike!
That's why, there's no rhyme or reason to when it's gonna happen.