Hey guys I am seeking the collective knowledge of this forum to help me diagnose a secondary extraction issue with my new 6 dasher build. The action, barrel and brass were all new at the start of this gun. My issue is that when I shoot I am having secondary extraction issues requiring a mallet to extract the brass on virgin and sized.
Components:
Brass - Alpha Dasher
Action - TL3 LA
Barrel - Krieger 7.5 1.25
Powder - Varet (32.0) grains
Bullet - Berger 109
FL Die - Whidden w/ .267 & .268 bushing
Seating - Wilson Inline
The first thing I examined was pressure - The cases nor action show any signs of pressure. There is no primer flow or push, no strange carbon rings, the speed is as expected at 600 yard (shotmarker), the bolt close and open are both normal with zero extra resistance on open after firing. Sized cases have no extraction problems and the freebore was cut for the 109 and im 30 thou off the lands. I had problems at 32.0 grains of powder (I'm not currently aware if less powder will still produce this issue but I would NOT expect pressure around 32gn of varget)
I talked to my gunsmith, Alpha, and Big horn to try and diagnose the issue and am still working on it. At first, I thought there may be a primary extraction issue not getting the case moving but upon talking to big horn their engineer was positive that was not the issue and I can visibly see the bolt start extraction in the primary stage making me think that is not the problem.I am seeing brass swipe on the bolt face.
I spoke with Alpha munition who had me measure multiple parameters and the brass was all within spec. After talking with Alpha I measured the necks of my brass and every single one of them is 0.2705 OD. My gunsmith told me that my neck was reamed to 0.272. If my neck was 0.272 I would expect my brass to be closer .272 or .2715 and thus believe I am having neck tensions issues from the gunsmith. I am not positive on this theory and would like to hear some others input on this.
I am waiting on a call back from my gunsmith currently now that I am aware of the fired neck OD but would like to hear some other opinions. Again there are no signs of pressure of the case and the problem is exclusive to secondary extraction.
Components:
Brass - Alpha Dasher
Action - TL3 LA
Barrel - Krieger 7.5 1.25
Powder - Varet (32.0) grains
Bullet - Berger 109
FL Die - Whidden w/ .267 & .268 bushing
Seating - Wilson Inline
The first thing I examined was pressure - The cases nor action show any signs of pressure. There is no primer flow or push, no strange carbon rings, the speed is as expected at 600 yard (shotmarker), the bolt close and open are both normal with zero extra resistance on open after firing. Sized cases have no extraction problems and the freebore was cut for the 109 and im 30 thou off the lands. I had problems at 32.0 grains of powder (I'm not currently aware if less powder will still produce this issue but I would NOT expect pressure around 32gn of varget)
I talked to my gunsmith, Alpha, and Big horn to try and diagnose the issue and am still working on it. At first, I thought there may be a primary extraction issue not getting the case moving but upon talking to big horn their engineer was positive that was not the issue and I can visibly see the bolt start extraction in the primary stage making me think that is not the problem.I am seeing brass swipe on the bolt face.
I spoke with Alpha munition who had me measure multiple parameters and the brass was all within spec. After talking with Alpha I measured the necks of my brass and every single one of them is 0.2705 OD. My gunsmith told me that my neck was reamed to 0.272. If my neck was 0.272 I would expect my brass to be closer .272 or .2715 and thus believe I am having neck tensions issues from the gunsmith. I am not positive on this theory and would like to hear some others input on this.
I am waiting on a call back from my gunsmith currently now that I am aware of the fired neck OD but would like to hear some other opinions. Again there are no signs of pressure of the case and the problem is exclusive to secondary extraction.