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Cerrosafe should capture the broken neck.I haven’t seen the neck portion, it was still stuck in his chamber when he left.
Okay, you have it figured out................so what was it?I haven’t seen the neck portion, it was still stuck in his chamber when he left. The break in the case body was pretty clean. I think we’ve figured it out. Thanks everyone!
While we’re on the subject, what size brush would you use to fish that 6 neck out with?
You are overthinking this.
rotate a bronze brush in that is a caliber larger. All that matters is it is tight, and the tighter the better.
Use a pistol rod and you will have more control.
If it doesn't pull on the first try or two, spray some brake cleaner on the brush. rotate it until you feel part of the brush is in front of the separated neck, then pull straight back....hard and fast.
I seriously doubt this is a case of over annealing. I’m speaking from experience having purposely over annealed cases and judged their performance against ones that were properly annealed. I would lean more to a case of servereky overworked and hardened brass, with NO annealing whatsoever.Without detailed information and maybe even with it, any diagnosis might be just supposition.
However, given the failure mood, I will take a stab at it, if the case was annealed, I would suspect over annealing causing the brass to exceed its elastic limit.
Or too much bump causing excessive headspace combined with a fast, near max charge weight.What did you figure out was the problem ? Usually breaks like this, anywhere on the case is caused by sizing/bumping/etc the case too often and causing a head space issue.
What got my attention was his description, "clean break". Like most, I have experienced fatigue failures but never a "clean break". Also, never had a separation in the neck / shoulder area even after loading 15 to 18 times with a F/L die and no annealing.I seriously doubt this is a case of over annealing. I’m speaking from experience having purposely over annealed cases and judged their performance against ones that were properly annealed. I would lean more to a case of servereky overworked and hardened brass, with NO annealing whatsoever.
The only brass I have ever had fail at the shoulder leaving the shoulder and neck in the chamber was on very old {brittle?} 30-06 cases that had been fired through a Garand multiple times then used in a bolt gun and that is where the case failed..I’ve never annealed, and I’ve never had any kind of case neck failure, with cases reloaded well past 10 times.
I’ve been reloading for over 30 years, with 10’s of thousands of rounds fired in competition, and I’ve never seen this particular failure, in my brass, or anyone else’s. Just peaked my curiosity, is all.
While we’re on the subject, what size brush would you use to fish that 6 neck out with?
My bet is just a case of work hardened brass.
I might add my 2 cents worth and say that through multiple firings the brass at the shoulder and neck gradually erodes and thus weakens and when age also factors in you can almost guarantee case failure….I'd second that.
Way back when, a guy who retired from shooting gave me his "match brass" - stuff that he used in fun matches with his buddies 5 or 10 years prior. Running it through a sizing die resulted in over half of it tearing the neck off with the failure point being from just below the shoulder to the as high as the neck/shoulder junction (there may have been a couple that failed along the neck itself - don't remember now.)
That brass now resides at the bottom of my recycling bucket.
How does one measure or quantify that erosion?I might add my 2 cents worth and say that through multiple firings the brass at the shoulder and neck gradually erodes and thus weakens and when age also factors in you can almost guarantee case failure….
A ball micrometer reading on a new case carried through multiple firings will keep track of the neck.How does one measure or quantify that erosion?
primer if ya doing it right.. ;-)Is this one of those 'Neck Size Only' cases?
No bump.
7 or 8 times without annealing?
Where would you expect the case to fail?