When I see/read a post by Mr Guffey, this picture always pops into my head
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Insulting him doesn't work. He just keeps posting.
When I see/read a post by Mr Guffey, this picture always pops into my head
![]()
When I see/read a post by Mr Guffey, this picture always pops into my head
![]()
...Same thing happens with any cartridge when fired. The brass becomes plastic for a milisecond under heat and pressure and forms to the chamber. Lucky for us it instantly springs away from the chamber walls but retains much of its new form. When you size it you return it to its previous shape....
So much for fire forming brass.
kvd, as you can see there is more going on than most of the members can keep up with
To verify all this is true take new brass and trim it all to the same length.
Then fire it
Then measure it and you will find that it is shorter
Then FL resize it and it will grow longer.
Each firing cycle and resizing cycle contributes to the growth of the case lengths.
I can appreciate your comments.
Despite the fact that you seem to be much maligned on this forum for some of your ideas,
It seems to me that a few thousandths clearance between the case neck and the chamber neck coupled with a few thousandths clearance between the case shoulder and the chamber shoulder would cause the cartridge to rest in the chamber at an angle due to the heavy back end - especially with generous head clearance. Shouldn't the precision reloader being doing all that is possible to align the bullet in the cartridge and subsequently the cartridge with the bore? Loose tolerances seem contrary to this goal.
Cases "loose their memory" because of the fact that when the chamber and case expands when a high pressure load is fired, the increase in chamber size can exceed the elastic limit of the brass, but not the steel, so when they both snap back the steel comes back to the same dimension that it started at, but the brass does not.
If the bullet is touching the rifling, or jammed into the rifling, the only 2 parts of the round that need to touch the chamber to give perfect alignment are the case head and the bullet. A very large fraction of winning benchrest shooters have their loaded rounds set up this way. Personally, I've never had a rifle that shot smaller with bullets jumping, except when shooting solid copper bullets.
Cases generally get tight in two places, at the shoulder, and above the head. Some time back a friend chambered up a barrel for himself in .243 AI. Since I knew that his would be pushing it to get all the velocity that he could I discouraged him from following his plan of using a home made die that would do nothing more than bump case shoulders, combined with a Lee Colle die. I told him that his cases would also get tight at the back, but since his previous experience had been with moderate loads in a .223 he did not believe me. Turns out that I was right. Since he is so Scotch about spending, and had done me some favors in the past, I went to a local gun show and picked up a used RCBS non-carbide .45 ACP die set for $10, removed everything from the sizing die body and gave it to him to use as a ring die, to size the bases of his cases. It worked fine. He is still using it.BoydAllen,
Thank you for another good explanation of why brass grows to the point that it will not allow smooth bolt closure. So far so good. That also explains hard bolt lift - since one now has a case in the chamber that is a few thousandths to long.
I will look up the youtube videos you mentioned. They can be an excellent source of information and learning.
Ken