I was at a match last week and a very experienced shooter a few squads down the line had a case head seperation. He was wearing safety glasses and took a hit to the surrounding face.,edited by author)
He was loading/shooting a 6mmBRX, light loads, good brass, and a proven rifle of several years.
He asked me to look at the blown case and give him my opinion. I too shoot the 6mm BRX so I have a good idea of the loading procedures.
I did not have headspace gauges at the range to check his gun. I did not have a case gauge to check some loaded ammo. I did not have a paper clip to check the inside of some of the fired cases web area. I did not have calipers or micrometers to measure the cases.
The brass had been loaded about 4-8 times which is noting for the BRX.
My opinion was the components were good, the load was not the problem. No mixed up powder. My thoughts were he was bumping the shoulders back too much and therefore caused a headspacing problem.
It is important to use steel headspacing gauges to chamber your rifle. It is just as important to set your dies correctly. It will prevent working your brass, and give you more consistant loads. If you are shooting a 6mmBRX and use your dies to also load 6mmBR then you need to make a .098 spacer and not continually be adjusting your dies. Get your dies adjusted correctly and leave them alone.
Good shooters and reloaders understand what SAAMI specs mean. The loaded cartridge properly fits the given firearm and is loaded within the pressure range of the given firearm. SAAMI specs allows a range of .0035" headspace length. Remember this is the max allowable. I prefer .001 to .0015" headspacing in a target rifle expecially a high pressure load like a 6mmBRX. I can get 15-20 loads out of my brass with no trimming. Loads this tight will have a slight preasure on bolt closing. We should prevent problems instead create them.
Safe loads don't just protect you the shooter they protect the guy beside you on the line.
Keep the smoke coming out of the muzzle and the bullets in the ten ring.
Rustystud
He was loading/shooting a 6mmBRX, light loads, good brass, and a proven rifle of several years.
He asked me to look at the blown case and give him my opinion. I too shoot the 6mm BRX so I have a good idea of the loading procedures.
I did not have headspace gauges at the range to check his gun. I did not have a case gauge to check some loaded ammo. I did not have a paper clip to check the inside of some of the fired cases web area. I did not have calipers or micrometers to measure the cases.
The brass had been loaded about 4-8 times which is noting for the BRX.
My opinion was the components were good, the load was not the problem. No mixed up powder. My thoughts were he was bumping the shoulders back too much and therefore caused a headspacing problem.
It is important to use steel headspacing gauges to chamber your rifle. It is just as important to set your dies correctly. It will prevent working your brass, and give you more consistant loads. If you are shooting a 6mmBRX and use your dies to also load 6mmBR then you need to make a .098 spacer and not continually be adjusting your dies. Get your dies adjusted correctly and leave them alone.
Good shooters and reloaders understand what SAAMI specs mean. The loaded cartridge properly fits the given firearm and is loaded within the pressure range of the given firearm. SAAMI specs allows a range of .0035" headspace length. Remember this is the max allowable. I prefer .001 to .0015" headspacing in a target rifle expecially a high pressure load like a 6mmBRX. I can get 15-20 loads out of my brass with no trimming. Loads this tight will have a slight preasure on bolt closing. We should prevent problems instead create them.
Safe loads don't just protect you the shooter they protect the guy beside you on the line.
Keep the smoke coming out of the muzzle and the bullets in the ten ring.
Rustystud