Doug Beach
Silver $$ Contributor
Excess pressure doesn’t split necks.
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Someone mentioned 'overworked brass'.
Take a cheap set of calipers and measure 'as fired' neck below the split (or another case if fired about same number of times, in the same chamber, and same headstamp).
Using same calipers measure another case run through your sizing die WITHOUT mandrel.
Install mandrel.
Now measure the same case with the same calipers expanded by your process.
One more measurement on the neck with a projectile seated.
This gives you sized, expanded, loaded, and fired neck diameters.
In the 7-08rem, Quickload shows 44 gr of N-140 beneath the 120 TTSX @ 2.800" coal = 62,569 psi
I am no expert or gunsmith, but I've been told that AR chambers like most semi-auto rifles tend to expand cases to a greater degree. Thus, repeated firing and sizing would increase work hardening of the necks compared to the tighter chambers of bolt rifles.Interesting
All mine are on an ar. Would that make that much difference?
The total amount of neck working involved in the firing / sizing / seating cycle for a factory chamber and using an off the shelf factory non-bushing die is horrendous. I did your exercise years ago for a 308 Win FN SPR (marksman type rifle made for LEA use), and the aggregate working was horrendous - can't remember the exact value, but over 40 thou' in total. It's not surprising necks split after a few firings without annealing, especially if the original factory annealing is poor.
R-P fireformed brass from a 'minimum SAAMI' 7-08 match chamber I had in an F-Class rifle a while back produced 56.4gn water overflow capacity. Only Lapua ran at 55gn; everything else had more capacity. So, I'd have thought 44gn N140 a stiff load but not excessive. (But maybe not even 'stiff' depending on how close to SAAMI spec Tikka makes its barrels and what the factory freebore runs at.)
As an aside, back in the days when I ran a UK spec (manually operated straight-pull; no gas-guns allowed here) custom-built AR-15 with a modified Wylde chamber cut by what was claimed to be one of the better US machine shops, I used Winchester brass (much better than today's some 25 years ago) sized and bullets seated with a standard Hornady 'New Dimension' set. Necks started to split on the 7th firing and were all scrap by 9 or 10. This was with very modest pressures as high pressure and straight-pull extraction don't mix well in the AR given its lack of cammed primary extraction. According to QuickLOAD, I'd start to see hard extraction with loads that got anywhere near 55,000 psi, so I was running at a fair bit less. (Conversely, European manufactured 5.56 NATO could be fired but needed a really hard tug on the heavy-duty side-operating handle to break the fired case fit in the chamber!) Neck splits are simply a fact of life in the absence of annealing when there are generous chamber clearances, standard reloading tools and techniques are employed - little or nothing to do with pressure as others have said in their posts.
It’s not really the size of the chamber that is the problem. It’s the speed of extraction, basically a tuning problem.I am no expert or gunsmith, but I've been told that AR chambers like most semi-auto rifles tend to expand cases to a greater degree. Thus, repeated firing and sizing would increase work hardening of the necks compared to the tighter chambers of bolt rifles.
Thanks for the clarification. I haven't shot an AR since 70-72 while in the Army. Know less about reloading for them.It’s not really the size of the chamber that is the problem. It’s the speed of extraction, basically a tuning problem.
You can set up an AR that it is easy enough on the brass to neck size only. I have also seen AR style rifles in large calibers so poorly tuned they pull case heads off.
Somewhere in between is where most people operate, but you can’t pull hot brass that is still stuck to the chamber wall out without some distortion. Even the fastest bolt action shooters just aren’t that fast and the brass is relatively cold coming out of the chamber.
Here’s a guess:
You can split a neck without loading a round.
Of course depending on the size of the neck expander, take a piece of brass and run it in and out of a die say say 50 or 100 times. No loading no firing. Just keep that brass in and out of the die. The only thing taking a stretch and contraction is the neck. I’ll say it will split. No pressure involved.
Like I said it’s a guess.
Excess pressure, hot day in Texas, Match day, hot load,hot barrel, to long in chamber.. scared the heck out of me,No signs of pressure leading up to this event. None... no flat primers, no marks on bottom of case, no sticky bolt. Then, "Boom!" Well, it wasn't like that either. Made the shot. Ejected the round and thought "wow" when I saw the case. It was the third group with increased powder. Increasing in increments of 0.3 grains. First round of that group. Packed it up and headed home.... Just don't know what sign I missed before this happened.
Speeds were increasing as well as the other "no sign" issues listed... until this shot. Speed decreased. Case ruined. I threw the other 6 cases in the trash too... just being safe.
Any idea on what I missed with over pressure signs?
ADDED:
7mm08 Tikka Stainless. Think it was the brass. I don't use RP for at least four years now. I'm not sure how that one got loaded... and I didn't notice it was RP until I posted this picture (can we all say "Blind as a Bat? LOL). Went back after posting this to see some other loads and RP used - 5 of them. Already disassembled... but I threw away 6 good brass earlier I'm sure. It kinda scared me as I have never had this happen before.
I was working a 120 TTSX with N140. 43.4, 43.7, 44.0 (case issue), 44.3 (did not shoot). If anyone can provide a quickload review before I try again it would be greatly appreciated.
and... the primer was pierced.
Never saw one just like that. AR ?Excess pressure, hot day in Texas, Match day, hot load,hot barrel, to long in chamber.. scared the heck out of me,
6PPCNever saw one just like that. AR ?
Not necessarily. All brass stretches quite a bit on the first firing in most guns. It is the need to full-length resize them and push the shoulders back at least .003' to .004" which ensures semi-auto-fired case stretch over that of a bolt gun in which the brass was only pushed back, say .001" or .002" and which could be neck sized only. Also - some guys have very tight chambers in their semi-autos which actually require a short-base sizing die (especially if using fired military brass) - all of which add up to shorter case life. Usually nothing to do with the chambers (of modern firearms). Then, of course, there is the variance between dies.I am no expert or gunsmith, but I've been told that AR chambers like most semi-auto rifles tend to expand cases to a greater degree. Thus, repeated firing and sizing would increase work hardening of the necks compared to the tighter chambers of bolt rifles.
And that is a fact!The total amount of neck working involved in the firing / sizing / seating cycle for a factory chamber and using an off the shelf factory non-bushing die is horrendous.
You split a neck. Did the primer pierce?No signs of pressure leading up to this event. None... no flat primers, no marks on bottom of case, no sticky bolt. Then, "Boom!" Well, it wasn't like that either. Made the shot. Ejected the round and thought "wow" when I saw the case. It was the third group with increased powder. Increasing in increments of 0.3 grains. First round of that group. Packed it up and headed home.... Just don't know what sign I missed before this happened.
Speeds were increasing as well as the other "no sign" issues listed... until this shot. Speed decreased. Case ruined. I threw the other 6 cases in the trash too... just being safe.
Any idea on what I missed with over pressure signs?
ADDED:
7mm08 Tikka Stainless. Think it was the brass. I don't use RP for at least four years now. I'm not sure how that one got loaded... and I didn't notice it was RP until I posted this picture (can we all say "Blind as a Bat? LOL). Went back after posting this to see some other loads and RP used - 5 of them. Already disassembled... but I threw away 6 good brass earlier I'm sure. It kinda scared me as I have never had this happen before.
I was working a 120 TTSX with N140. 43.4, 43.7, 44.0 (case issue), 44.3 (did not shoot). If anyone can provide a quickload review before I try again it would be greatly appreciated.
and... the primer was pierced.
Yes - kind of like mixing 5x fired brass with 10x fired brassAt the risk of sounding like a dick, I only neck size my 6MM and my 223 Remington, (varmint shooting). Years ago I bought so much brass for each and I'm such a lazy shit, I shoot them until the neck splits and toss them in the recycling tub.
The worse problem is that you're not noticing a different brand brass.
It is interesting that your speeds "were increasing" up until that shot. A lot of guys brought up different topics - so I'll dwell on that one element of what you said. Let's say you were running a maximum load (I have no knowledge about that powder/charge in that caliber). And let's say you were using something like an older Chargemaster (like mine) or another scale that requires it to be on for at least 20 minutes before it "settles in". If I just turn on my scale and start weighing charges and filling cases (say I'm doing 100), I'll get about a third into the cases and my charge weights are at least 1/10th grain off from when I began. I have had to re-do many a portion of a batch until I finally either started weighing after waiting a half hour for the scale to warm up or just use one of my other trusted scales. I'd fire up your scale and weigh out five loads of powder. Wait a half hour then weigh five more and compare them with the first batch. You may be very surprised. Of course, if using a balance beam - this may be mute point.No signs of pressure leading up to this event. None... no flat primers, no marks on bottom of case, no sticky bolt. Then, "Boom!" Well, it wasn't like that either. Made the shot. Ejected the round and thought "wow" when I saw the case. It was the third group with increased powder. Increasing in increments of 0.3 grains. First round of that group. Packed it up and headed home.... Just don't know what sign I missed before this happened.
Speeds were increasing as well as the other "no sign" issues listed... until this shot. Speed decreased. Case ruined. I threw the other 6 cases in the trash too... just being safe.
Any idea on what I missed with over pressure signs?
ADDED:
7mm08 Tikka Stainless. Think it was the brass. I don't use RP for at least four years now. I'm not sure how that one got loaded... and I didn't notice it was RP until I posted this picture (can we all say "Blind as a Bat? LOL). Went back after posting this to see some other loads and RP used - 5 of them. Already disassembled... but I threw away 6 good brass earlier I'm sure. It kinda scared me as I have never had this happen before.
I was working a 120 TTSX with N140. 43.4, 43.7, 44.0 (case issue), 44.3 (did not shoot). If anyone can provide a quickload review before I try again it would be greatly appreciated.
and... the primer was pierced.
Yes - kind of like mixing 5x fired brass with 10x fired brassAt the risk of sounding like a dick, I only neck size my 6MM and my 223 Remington, (varmint shooting). Years ago I bought so much brass for each and I'm such a lazy shit, I shoot them until the neck splits and toss them in the recycling tub.
The worse problem is that you're not noticing a different brand brass.
I have used many thousands of pieces of Lake City in high-volume A/R varmint hunts over many years and I can say that having split necks after 4 to 5 loadings in an A/R is pretty much the norm. I anneal mine every other firing for twice+ the life, mainly because I skim turn the necks and don't want to have to replicate that process and the primer pocket reaming any more than necessary.I seem to be getting split necks in 223 LC brass much sooner than I used too. I still have some 70's, 80's and 90's with 10-20 loading and it's still going strong. early 2000's seem to only about 7-9 loadings and newer brass I'm lucky to get 3-5 loadings. I don"t anneal. Think its oversizing the case necks and oversize chamber necks.
Frank