madmixerman
Gold $$ Contributor
Quick question here; did the rifle in question have an M16 or SAKO extractor installed rather than the original Remington style extractor? I had an interesting afternoon talking with Dave Hall (Hall Actions) about this, and he mentioned that converting the M700 over to use these extractors was the fastest way to defeat one of Remington's more important safety features, the "three rings of steel" that others have already mentioned. Majorly overpressure loads that an actually swell the action will "engage" this safety feature as each successive ring expands into the others, sealing the action tightly. The addition of that extractor provides an easy escape once you've reached those levels of pressure, and you're venting it into an area that wasn't designed to serve that purpose. As Dave said, it takes shockingly little pressure to destroy an action when it's directed into areas that weren't designed to contain gasses such as this. Just a thought, but since that conversation, I've never used such and extractor on any of my M700s ever again.
It was a Panda action shooting a 6BRA. It blew the back of the case off. First time loaded( was fireformed to the bra case prior) as BRA with new die. Sharp edge on die cut a circle on brass that wasn't noticeable when loaded. We think that did it but not sure yet. Still checking things further.
Last edited: