• 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.

Fireforming in cold weather resulted in split necks

Fireformed some 6 Fat Rat brass yesterday. I had only ever previously done so in the summer, and had no lost cases. Yesterday I shot 10 fireform loads, and stopped after I lost 3 of them to split necks. The only difference from the summer was that temps yesterday were in the 30s as opposed to the 90s.

Anybody else experience that before?
 
5yrs ago I would have discounted this..... but, I work in construction with rebar, we've had a couple wikkid cold winters here in WA and my guys were complaining "the rebar's breaking when we bend it"

And I DID scoff it off...... "cold" here in WA is 25-30 degrees........ I'm like "steel melts at what, 2500 degrees??"......

But I was WRONG! Rebar definitely becomes brittle in cold weather.

I have no idea whether this is relevant but now I'm interested to try a test. I will be freezing some fireform rounds :)
 
I have never experienced it. And I would be more suspect of the this brass cracking due to work hardening than I would low temperature. The hot gas that causes the shoulder to fireform is going to generate heat to warm the brass so the ambient temperature is not of consequence.
 
I watched a program were they were saying in Alaska it gets so cold even steel breaks , losing half it's strength or even more... Yet that's Alaska.. it definitely gets cold there....
 
It is not work gardening or cyclic fatigue when you’re forming new new never fired brass.

Also, it was identical to summer fireforming loads. Same blue box of brass. The temperature is precisely the only difference. I wouldn’t have done if I knew that was gonna happen.

My hypothesis is that it’s due to the more rapid cooling.
 
Could it be that you'd have lost those cases anyway? I normally lose 1 or 2 when making dasher brass. Not saying that its for sure.

Aaron
 
How long was the brass loaded for? I recently fired 5 fireform loads and fired split necks. Virgin 444 Marlin Brass necked down to 338 aka 338 JDJ cartridge. I kinda forgot about not shooting all of the fireform loads. 8-10 months have gone by since I loaded them. I have seen this before after they sit for a while. Will pull them down anneal and loaded them up again.
 

Attachments

  • 961E9A37-8497-4A12-B0B2-6D3D0E9C1B3D.jpeg
    961E9A37-8497-4A12-B0B2-6D3D0E9C1B3D.jpeg
    185.6 KB · Views: 33
  • 8B028C06-A3BD-40ED-AE38-739434734D96.jpeg
    8B028C06-A3BD-40ED-AE38-739434734D96.jpeg
    108.5 KB · Views: 26
There IS such a thing as brittle fracture, though I am unable to find information for cartridge brass. One of the engineering properties of steel alloys is their "reference transition temperature"; in essence, this is the temperature at which they are considered to stop behaving in a ductile manner and fail in a brittle manner. In other words, when you stress the metal to its failure point, will it first deform under stress (stretch) or will it break all at once?

https://www.designnews.com/material...ctady-lesson-brittle-fracture/173702193545746

Interestingly, the materials literature on cartridge brass lists "cold workability" as one of its desirable qualities.
http://www.matweb.com/search/DataSheet.aspx?MatGUID=aeac472e2ef04f12bddb09ea8fab8379
 
How long was the brass loaded for? I recently fired 5 fireform loads and fired split necks. Virgin 444 Marlin Brass necked down to 338 aka 338 JDJ cartridge. I kinda forgot about not shooting all of the fireform loads. 8-10 months have gone by since I loaded them. I have seen this before after they sit for a while. Will pull them down anneal and loaded them up again.

Hmmm this might be it too.
Brass was sized from 6.5 Grendel to a 6mm false shoulder back in July. I fireformed the first batch that same week with no losses, and came back to the job yesterday.
 
I just fire formed 22-250 AI brass in 25 degree weather with a wind chill, no lost brass.

I would try firing a few formed pieces to warm the chamber and keep those few left to form in your jacket to keep the temp up on the brass to be formed if a warm vehicle isn't available.
 
Strangely, cold temperatures make brass stiffer, stronger and more ductile than warmer temperatures. Perhaps there is some other way that cold temperatures come in to play, but it’s not material properties.
 

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
166,593
Messages
2,222,039
Members
79,755
Latest member
wudusay
Back
Top