• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Carbon/soot on Case Shoulders

i only speak from my mistakes, so.... i had length trimmed some brass and deburred the neck with one of those cheesy lee thimble tools. i got sloppy, or the tool quit cutting cleanly, and i pushed down a burr that really could only be seen under a magnifying glass. upon firing the burr flattened out but.... it was not fully around the neck, being more pronounced on one side usually.

i posted a photo quite some time back and i think it was on a very similar thread as yours.
When I trim I use a giraud so no rough edges on my brass.
 
Lawrence, a different angle…. How do you clean your chamber? Any carbon build up in the chamber? Any wet residue remaining after the clean in the chamber? How do you clean the brass? Anything on it that carbonises on the case? Some long shots there……

An observation would be that the shoulder angles in that first pic looks very different to each other…..

Sorry, one more….. can you drop a projectile into the neck of a fired case? Or is it a tight fit?
Depending on round count more often on the 6bra I use solvent and some iosso or kg2 bore finish. I use a borescope to verify results.
7FFDBB5F-9E34-4ADC-9038-A8AC47FD7F66.jpeg
 
I think virgin brass is stronger with the most neck tension, I would set a few brass aside without annealing and add some NT for comparison
 
I think virgin brass is stronger with the most neck tension, I would set a few brass aside without annealing and add some NT for comparison
I’m gonna try some of my 284 brass that’s been turned for a .313 neck. I already tried some brass that was neck turned for my .268 6bra and it sealed properly. I suspect the necks are thick when left as a no turn. I was just wondering if others running no turn chambers have the same experience.
 
I’m gonna try some of my 284 brass that’s been turned for a .313 neck. I already tried some brass that was neck turned for my .268 6bra and it sealed properly. I suspect the necks are thick when left as a no turn. I was just wondering if others running no turn chambers have the same experience.
Once you fireform there should a difference in water capacity. There is more water capacity in the fireform cases therefore reducing the pressure and allowing the gas to pass by. Have you tried increasing bullet tension by trying different bushing sizes? Try tighter bushings in .001" increments to +.005".
 
You need a snappier powder pressure curve. Or just keep on shooting.
But if that were the case why isn’t the virgin brass reacting the same? It also has to grow in more areas than the once fired stuff that only gets sized down .002 in the critical areas.
The powders being used are the most common per caliber and the velocities are inline with the speeds were most tune at.
 
WOW, I was going to post about the same thing. My 6.5 CM was getting some blowby and I showed another shooter my brass.

He suggested that I needed to anneal the brass.

The brass I have been using is Starline and I have been loading this same 150 pieces for 4 years now.

Today I decided to try to anneal some and see if that took care of my issues.

I watched a youtube video of a guy using a propane torch and a electric drill.

I tried his second way of doing it and it worked. Loaded up 6 rounds of annealed brass and went to the range.

The picture below shows 12 pieces of my brass that I shot today. the top are not annealed and the bottom 6 were annealed.

You can see the differance on the soot deposit.
 

Attachments

  • DSC06844.JPG
    DSC06844.JPG
    130.3 KB · Views: 165
index.php
Now, THIS is a soot problem. :D
 
WOW, I was going to post about the same thing. My 6.5 CM was getting some blowby and I showed another shooter my brass.

He suggested that I needed to anneal the brass.

The brass I have been using is Starline and I have been loading this same 150 pieces for 4 years now.

Today I decided to try to anneal some and see if that took care of my issues.

I watched a youtube video of a guy using a propane torch and a electric drill.

I tried his second way of doing it and it worked. Loaded up 6 rounds of annealed brass and went to the range.

The picture below shows 12 pieces of my brass that I shot today. the top are not annealed and the bottom 6 were annealed.

You can see the differance on the soot deposit.
Maybe just the pic, but the cases on the bottom look sootier than the ones on the top.
 
Hey Lawrence,

I’ve dealt with this exact issue for quite a while. For my situation I think it’s related to the chamber, I’m not sure why, but it only happens with one reamer.

I put a more aggressive cross hatch (180 emery) in those chambers and even the neck area. For me it helped a lot.

On a side note, it amazes me when I have soot down the case and don’t see any effect on target at LR.

Tod
 
Maybe just the pic, but the cases on the bottom look sootier than the ones on the top.
I was refering to the soot on the shoulders. The cases do look dirtier after annealing due to the brass discoloration but I think it softened the brass so it expands and gets a better seal on the shoulder areas.
 
I was refering to the soot on the shoulders. The cases do look dirtier after annealing due to the brass discoloration but I think it softened the brass so it expands and gets a better seal on the shoulder areas.
Looks like your having great luck with the Starline brass. How many firings do you have on that four year old brass?
 
My 6bra seals at sholder.
30 br seals at case mouth.

The older the brass got (could have been the more rounds on that barrel) the further it came down on sholder.
:)
One of my annealer torches now point lower toward sholder.

Most bra's don't grow much.
 
Looks like your having great luck with the Starline brass. How many firings do you have on that four year old brass?
Too many to count.

Out of 150 cases I think I have discarded maybe 15 for split neck and 4 for primer pockets (small rifle primer)

During the summer I shoot 600 and 1000 yd every week, so maybe 75-100 reloads.

I was using Federal and could only get maybe 5 reloads before I go neck splits.
 
I had the same issue with a 7 ss. Funny thing was it only had .002 clearance in the neck at first when the blow by was occurring. It would soot every time and I tried all the same things you did. I turned the necks for .005 clearance and now it seals at the neck, no more blow by with the same brass prep. I’m guessing that firing the brass after the necks are turned flows some brass and causes a small buildup at the base of the neck. This buildup of brass is now sealing the chamber. I had a 7-08 with .012 neck clearance and would blow by soot to the bolt face. Turning that brass also fixed it.
 
The virgin brass being softer is my thought also but I took a few pieces of brass and annealed to a glowing red neck and those still had soot on the shoulder. I would think annealing that much would have made it as soft or softer than the virgin brass ever was.
Glowing red neck is far too hot. You were not testing what you were trying to test with those pieces.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,249
Messages
2,214,731
Members
79,488
Latest member
Andrew Martin
Back
Top