I consider myself a fairly disciplined reloader meaning following all the safety protocols. Part of my routine is to inspect cases for defects before reloading them. Over the years I've become a little complacent just giving them a quick look for any splits in the neck or to a lesser extent, the shoulder, which is the typical defect I've encountered over 50 years of reloading and almost always after at least 10 - 12 reloads.
Well today was a first! I happened to notice a ring around a 223 Rem case just above the case head. The case had been shot only out of my Rem bolt rifle which I've had for years. Only had 10 reloads on the case, I typically get about 17 to 18 before I retire them in this rifle.
At first, I thought it was just friction mark, so I used some 0000-steel wool to polish it. The mark remained. I've never in 50 years of reloading had an incipient case head separation but I guess there is a first time for everything. So, I did the "paper clip" check and sure enough, I could feel the surface change inside the case at exactly this location. To be sure, I sectioned the case and behold my first incipient case head separation!! I carefully inspected the other 59 cases dedicated to this rifle and found no others with this condition.
I do carefully control my FL sizing measuring should set back with a bump gauge and caliper, so I don't have clue why this occurred. I only use virgin cases dedicated to specific rifle. The cases are Remington, 10 reloads, .001 to .002 shoulder set back.
I'm puzzled since I've probably loaded well in excess of 20,000 rifle cases and never had this happen. Any ideas?
PS: The paper clip test does work. I will in the future more closely inspect cases.
Well today was a first! I happened to notice a ring around a 223 Rem case just above the case head. The case had been shot only out of my Rem bolt rifle which I've had for years. Only had 10 reloads on the case, I typically get about 17 to 18 before I retire them in this rifle.
At first, I thought it was just friction mark, so I used some 0000-steel wool to polish it. The mark remained. I've never in 50 years of reloading had an incipient case head separation but I guess there is a first time for everything. So, I did the "paper clip" check and sure enough, I could feel the surface change inside the case at exactly this location. To be sure, I sectioned the case and behold my first incipient case head separation!! I carefully inspected the other 59 cases dedicated to this rifle and found no others with this condition.
I do carefully control my FL sizing measuring should set back with a bump gauge and caliper, so I don't have clue why this occurred. I only use virgin cases dedicated to specific rifle. The cases are Remington, 10 reloads, .001 to .002 shoulder set back.
I'm puzzled since I've probably loaded well in excess of 20,000 rifle cases and never had this happen. Any ideas?
PS: The paper clip test does work. I will in the future more closely inspect cases.