You got sloppy after 9 shots ?
Think like this for a moment. Have you ever heard of guys decapping live primers in a press, if it goes off, the primer is coming out of case, and you do not want your body in it's path.I still don't know what to say about the flattened primers. The ones fired today look approximately the same as the ones sent by Beretta and the 21 rounds I fired in June. Perhaps the pics I posted earlier in the thread are misleading, and the amount of flattening is perfectly normal. Almost all of the primers still have a slightly rounded edge, and I need someone with more loading experience than myself to look at the cases in person and tell me what they think. I'm still a novice. Any volunteers in Eastern WA State?
OK,I see now .No! I got sloppy after more than 50 shots with the .223 while waiting for the Creedmoor barrel to cool. My eyes go bad quickly.
Think like this for a moment. Have you ever heard of guys decapping live primers in a press, if it goes off, the primer is coming out of case, and you do not want your body in it's path.
So, wouldn't adding powder to a case and firing it magnify the situation, the only thing stopping the primer from coming out of the case on ignition is your bolt face. Now realize new brass can grow 4-6 thousands in your chamber on the first firing, some more. Now your brass is slammed into the bolt face harder than normal too.
Flat primers on new brass is not the best way to determine pressure. You can have differing degrees of flatness, if you were to decap some and the base of the primer resembles a .357 rimmed case. It could be a little warm, but if you duplicated that load, would they be that flat the 2nd firing? Most of the time not, because brass is tighter in the chamber and the movement for both brass and primer has been reduced.
In my opinion you're reaching here because you are leery of what went on shooting Hornady factory ammo.
Factory ammo. Factory chamber. Blown primer. Hard extraction. Inability to chamber factory ammo. More than one red flag screaming at you to stop.
Get with a good gunsmith and have him find the problem. IMO, you need to know exactly what’s going on before you fire the gun again and that’s not going to happen over the internet.
^^^^ PLEASE BE ADVISED AND LISTEN TO THIS ABOVE!!! ^^^^
Something is wrong do not shoot it again. Several very serious things need to be checked.
Sorry if you did not read the entire thread, but Beretta thoroughly inspected this rifle over several weeks, firing multiple rounds from different manufacturers and taking precise measurements. It shoots "lights out" with quality ammo. Not a single issue since its return.
Lolol thank you now I feel a little silly. Now everyone knows I can’t shoot spell or read completely. It just makes me nervous to hear when that kind of thing happens. I automatically think of locking lug failures, or something in the lug race etc etc. That’s an awful lot of pressure in close proximity to important body parts when things go wrong. Glade all was ok with rifle