wildcatter
Silver $$ Contributor
That don't take much! I've stretched more than one Contender! One just using factory Hornaday 260 grain SP's. Another with full house loads in 35 Remington using 210 gr. Cast Bullets and 3031 powder, " a few hundred loads in that one".A friend was reloading a 7mm TCU and grabbed the wrong cannister of powder. 2400 instead of IMR 4198. He did manage to stretch the frame of his Tompson Center Contender.
This is irrelevant to the pressures displayed in the OP's case! That is severe pressure! Sorry but brass did not flow that deep into the ejector without outrageous pressure! And even with the amount of pressure it would take to flow that much brass into the ejector, it would have to be contained with the bolt locked!
The blow out could be weak case if it were not for the obvious!
1) Flow into the ejector
2) the neck was contained till pressure dropped
3) even the shoulder was not released to deform it
In this case it looks like the case itself was contained and expanded to tight to the chamber to extract, the pressure "apparently" once high enough to actuate the action, blew the back of the case out instantly dumping its pressure while already taking out the components the system uses to activate the bolt release.
By then everything was released out the back of the case, before the bolt could contain it Long enough to hold enough pressure against the inside of the case head to start the case backwards out of the chamber.
I state this because unfortunatly decades ago, when the 788 Remington was introduced as the first rifle to ever be built on the then Commercialy adopted 7mm/08 case, I had one of the first! Same year they quit offering anything but the 223 and 22/250 with full length barrels. Everything else from 223 to 308 were only available with 18.5" carbine barrels.
I also only bought it for cast bullets! Everything was great using a 175 grain cast GC, and 2400 powder, loaded to around 2200 fps. But one case with my load of the faster 2400 powder double charged, did exactly what I see hear!
Being a bolt action, that can only fire with the bolt completely locked, as hear. Once the brass blew out in the rear, taking out the extractor, the front ring around the case head on the bolt, and dumped everything else out the pressure port in the side of the action. I had to use a hammer to beat the bolt open, yes a rawhide hammer didn't move it! But the brass head tore loose from the orfaces "ejector hole and anything else brass could flow into" while beating the bolt back as then had to tread a lag screw into the case and use a slide hammer I made to get the case out.
There was so much pressure, it formed the case to the neck and chamber, leaving it perfectly formed to the barrels chamber.
I'm confident the same thing happend here. Maybe not an over charge, maybe a heavier bullet got mixed in, this would easily be done with bulk bullets, even a single box of premium bullets, hopefully not other components left around a loading station. For me it was an eye opener, hopefully here to.
But there is little doubt in my mind, the action had to be lo ked long enough to hold enough extreme pressure to build to allow that head to flow that much brass into the ejector. Unsupported, I don't believe it would happen. Only other thing I could imagine is a very hot load, holding the action closed from dirty or failed gas system? I just can't see this much brass flow with an unsupported case head!
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