I still feel after sized and loaded the round should have chambered. When I saw dents from pressure or other causes they seemed more rounded and most times they were on the body also. They just weren't just the shoulder. Not saying the cause just my opinion. MattMatt look at the neck shoulder area . The only way brass moves like that without having sharp edges is with pressure . You can get the same shape from a air dent oil dent or pressure dent from shooting. If you look close your can see the stress cracking . Larry
With the neck being split the neck size would be too big. LarryI still feel after sized and loaded the round should have chambered. When I saw dents from pressure or other causes they seemed more rounded and most times they were on the body also. They just weren't just the shoulder. Not saying the cause just my opinion. Matt
I cut off a petal from a LR primer anvil and I was able to force it through the flash hole. The petal appears large enough to have caused the dent. Perhaps inspecting the anvils from the fired cases will validate this possibility......or not.
Or did the petals separate from the anvil tip (factory defect)- and the anvil tip was propelled out the flash-hole as the primer ignited? The anvils appear to be brass.
Tom I would to see the Gorilla that could damage to a case like that closing the bolt. I never have been able to close the bolt with a grain of powder on the shoulder. Let alone gouge the neck and dent a case. Sure isn't a SavageLarry, UN zoom your phone and notice there's still a bullet seated.
Tom
TomLarry, UN zoom your phone and notice there's still a bullet seated.
Tom
Larry, UN zoom your phone and notice there's still a bullet seated.
Tom I didI would like to see the Gorilla that closed the bolt gouged the neck and dented the case .
Every time I got just powder one piece of powder I haven't ben able to close the bolt,
I don't think ever a cave man could do that damage do you.
Larry
The neck was way before the cam worked. And the powder I was referring to wasn't in a savage . My Remington's , Batt , steller and Savage I can't cam over with a grain of powder on the shoulder . LarryMozella anneals his cases and it wouldn't be that hard to do. I have seen guys bend cases beyond fixing. Some guns besides Savages have cam built into them. Matt
Tom I can say I never have had trash ON my cases when sizeing . Can't say the same for inside. Seating I don't seat with my sizing die . I have seen a dent like that from firefourm . It's is obvious to me it was a reloading error. Not from clambering the round. A friend had cases that he turned the neck with the wrong angel and a fine pin hole and when he reloaded them they had the same dent and neck marks. I can't buy the chambering the round did that. LarryThe bold is what I was referring to in your post.
I would be most inclined to say you ran into debris in the sizing or seating die and somehow missed it in QC. Like I spent primer got somewhere it shouldn't have maybe.
Tom
Popped a dent right into it. LarryPiece of popcorn? As good as any theory so far.