I have a thing for 22K Hornet single shot rifles and Fire Forming is not something I enjoy much but I've gotten much better and seldom crack cases anymore.
Usually I use a reduced load that only 3/4 fills the case and had always heard that it was important to point the rifle up before firing to make sure that the powder was as close to the flash hole as possible to minimize flash over and detonation. Well I got a little lax and didn't tilt the rifle and with my single shots the round is pointed slightly down when loading on the bench. I did it twice in a row and not only did it not crack the case, it put both rounds through the same hole. I then tried it again and then in another rifle and every time the rounds loaded pointing down before firing had better accuracy than those tilted up. Still no cracked necks. Early on I did confirm that if the powder is evenly distributed horizontally so that the air gap runs the length of the case it can cause detonation and crack the necks.
So what do you suppose is going on that the air gap at the primer end is more accurate than the gap at the bullet end? Or am I just over thinking the whole thing.
Usually I use a reduced load that only 3/4 fills the case and had always heard that it was important to point the rifle up before firing to make sure that the powder was as close to the flash hole as possible to minimize flash over and detonation. Well I got a little lax and didn't tilt the rifle and with my single shots the round is pointed slightly down when loading on the bench. I did it twice in a row and not only did it not crack the case, it put both rounds through the same hole. I then tried it again and then in another rifle and every time the rounds loaded pointing down before firing had better accuracy than those tilted up. Still no cracked necks. Early on I did confirm that if the powder is evenly distributed horizontally so that the air gap runs the length of the case it can cause detonation and crack the necks.
So what do you suppose is going on that the air gap at the primer end is more accurate than the gap at the bullet end? Or am I just over thinking the whole thing.
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