J F Johannes
AKA "RatRifle"
oops..... missed that, sorry. Still max load for the 224V.I believe that's .223 data; he's shooting a .224 Valk. He's on the upper end of their charge weights, but nothing crazy.
oops..... missed that, sorry. Still max load for the 224V.I believe that's .223 data; he's shooting a .224 Valk. He's on the upper end of their charge weights, but nothing crazy.
Check chamber length and brass trim length. Long brass, short chamber, bullet crimped by chamber on loading.
Not keeping brass sorted by times fired is something to watch. I would not mix.
It may take up to 5 firings for primer pockers to expand. Your load seems to be maximum?
I'm sure the answer to this is no, but I'll ask anyway...Not trying to imply anything by it.
New lot of powder, or bullets? Any chance you cleaned the barrel, and maybe left the chamber a little wet?
Where I'm getting at is that annealing shouldn't cause that, so I'd be looking elsewhere.
Over-annealed case = too soft brass.
Too soft to handle the pressure you have.
You may actually not be over pressure for good brass but that soft brass wants to run somewhere when fired.
Wimpy neck tension would not be the cause for your angst. Upon primer explosion the primer is jammed into the rifling (leade) and the entire powder charge is like an uncompressible liquid plastered forward with bullet immediately prior to powder combustion. Wimpy neck tension or tight (short of welding the bullet in place) this would happen no matter what. Are your bullets in place after shoving the loaded rounds into the magazine and COAL unchanged after stripping a loaded round from magazine into chamber? I did see some reference to crimping.
My suggestion would be to look at annealing for making those brass heads sort of soft (annealing). The real big question - were the cartridge brass heads protected from the 2000 plus degree heat blast of the propane torch (assuming propane was used)?
Annealing, crystal size, work hardening, tough hard springy brass heads, primer pockets, signs of annealing by colors just below shoulder to mouth all good stuff to know about - "forensic analysis", has always scared me real bad no matter what, legions of lawyers, court testimony, depositions, pressure…. Should I be compelled to perform any "forensic analysis" on my ammo production factory loaded ammo would be the only option.
Take care and make good ammo!
immediately tested the case heads. 343C melted slightly on all three, 454C smoked almost imperceptibly on them.
Thanks for the reply. Yes, I totally agree. And I totally thought I wasn't screwing it up. I got some Tempilstiik's and tested three cases immediately after heating them. 343C melted a little bit, 454C smoked almost imperceptibly. I didn't think 343C-350C would anneal/soften brass for the few seconds it was subjected to the temperature (15 seconds or less). I'm going to read some on that to see if I'm incorrect.
--HC
In response.Thanks for the reply. My (admittedly limited) understanding is that the primer can displace the bullet upon ignition in certain, but not all, situations. BR primers, purportedly, are designed/built for low neck tension use as in Benchrest, so that primer ignition doesn't dislodge the bullet before the powder burn has the opportunity to do so. I can speculate until we run out of Internet storage on that: I'm just sayin' what I read. If that is true (I read it on the Internet so it has to be true, right?) then it's possible for a full-power (CCI says to treat the #41 as a "magnum primer") to dislodge a loosely-held bullet. Maybe. The points are these: 1) I've got conflicting data about this and 2) please don't take offenxe, I'm not trying to step on you, just voicing thoughts, not proven facts.
Some of the first replies were regarding whether the bullets migrated upon chambering and extraction and the answer was: No. The bullets held their ground or moved 0.0015" (1.5 thousandths).
I got Tempilstik's today (via Amazon) in 343C and 454C. I annealed 3 cases in the same fashion as before and immediately tested the case heads. 343C melted slightly on all three, 454C smoked almost imperceptibly on them. So, my homework is: will 343C anneal brass (soften it) appreciably in 15 seconds or less?
My take on your comments re "annealing, crystal size, work hardening..." is this: It's all gray. Yes, Virginia, I fear it is all gray...but there is Santa Claus. I was hoping, I guess, that annealing would be more black and white, simple, easy. Apparently it's easier to get an accurate answer to which cartridge is the best. <GRIN>
--HC
Hey, all, I'm having a problem with some rounds I loaded for a 224 Valkyrie in an AR-15 platform and I'm wondering if annealing the cases has something to do with it.
I am loading 60gr Nosler BT Varmint bullets in used brass over 29.2gr CFE-223, CCI #41 primers. I use these for hunting, switching from the factory Federal cartridges, and I go through 20 or so each week. I had worked up the load from down around 28gr powder, shooting over a chronograph, finding which amount of powder would get me the velocity I wanted and looking for pressure signs (specifically: flattened primers, extractor/ejector extrusion, ejector swipe). I found that 29.2gr of CFE-223 gave me a slightly flattened primer, good velocity (similar to the Federal factory stuff), and no other signs of over-pressure.
I got good groups from the test batch and decided to load up 50. Considering that this is a hunting rifle and also an AR-15, I always full-length resize my cases. Furthermore, considering that I do not sort, organize, and log "rounds fired", some of these may be on their 3rd or 4th or 2nd or whatever trip through the rifle...so I thought annealing the cases might be a neat idea. So, I annealed them. I loaded them with the same load/components I'd used in the workup. And they are dangerously over-pressured! Jeez, I shot 3 of them, 2 before I noticed the problem and 1 afterwards to "be sure", and all three: blew the primer out and expanded the case head. I mean, I can see where the chamber ends support for the case, and the primers can be put back in by just dropping them in. Wow!
I pulled 5 of cartridges randomly and weighed the powder charges, in case I made a dumb mistake in the loading, but, no, 29.1 and 29.2 grains for each. I had the correct powder and primer and seating depth. I noticed the seating effort was seriously reduced when I loaded the annealed cases (I used a light crimp with a Lee FCD like usual for the AR-15), and, of course, pulling them apart is easy, too. I had stuck a bullet in a naked case in the reloading process to compare bullet seating effort and, when I pulled it apart, I noticed that the effort was significantly higher to remove the bullet from the case.
So, my question then is: what happened? My best guess is that the reduced neck tension allows the bullet to slide forward either with the primer discharge or otherwise dramatically earlier on in the powder burn and, therefore, is jamming on the lands and causing a serious spike in chamber pressure.
I'd like to see what insight/thoughts you folks might have. Also, if it is just the neck tension causing the change (in this case, from annealing), then this might serve as a warning to others.
Thanks for your time.
--HC