Curious what you all think about the picture below showing some primer cratering. In general, and I could be wrong, I thought cratered primers were caused by a sloppy firing pin to firing pin hole fit. Headspace issues could also be a contributor as could overpressured loads. I am not telling, I am asking.
This is not causing an issue but one of my actions is causing this:

These are Federal 210s and I tried those to see just how bad it might be as I think Federal's cups are the thinnest. It is the same when using my normal primer, CCI 200s. BR2s are slightly better but still have a raised circumference.
On this action, firing pin protrusion is normal at .051". Measuring the firing pin diameter with a micrometer shows approximately .0647". Using the inside jaws of a caliper (not a great way to measure but the only one available to me) shows the hole to be approximately .0680" for .0033" of clearance. headspace is ~.0015"
I am using a 28 lb firing pin spring and wondering if this could be a contributor to the raised edges. The firing pin is a normal factory firing pin - either heavy nor lightened in any way.
I don't think any of this is causing a problem. It is just different than other actions shooting the exact same load in the same chamber with the same components.
Thank you for your thoughts,
Hank
This is not causing an issue but one of my actions is causing this:

These are Federal 210s and I tried those to see just how bad it might be as I think Federal's cups are the thinnest. It is the same when using my normal primer, CCI 200s. BR2s are slightly better but still have a raised circumference.
On this action, firing pin protrusion is normal at .051". Measuring the firing pin diameter with a micrometer shows approximately .0647". Using the inside jaws of a caliper (not a great way to measure but the only one available to me) shows the hole to be approximately .0680" for .0033" of clearance. headspace is ~.0015"
I am using a 28 lb firing pin spring and wondering if this could be a contributor to the raised edges. The firing pin is a normal factory firing pin - either heavy nor lightened in any way.
I don't think any of this is causing a problem. It is just different than other actions shooting the exact same load in the same chamber with the same components.
Thank you for your thoughts,
Hank