I was breaking in a new 300 NM and noted over pressure signs with the brass, even with light loads - 83 grains Retumbo with 230 Bergers @ 2850. I checked all my tolerances i.e. neck clearance of .003, headspace of .0015, etc. I was flattening primers and was getting some gas past the primers even at 83 g and was worse at 84 and 85 grains. I was using new brass and noted that the primers seated very very hard so I resized the primer pockets on some of the new brass and this helped a little with the hard seating but was still getting over-pressure signs with the brass. So I took my now once fired brass and full resized it, including primer pockets and reloaded 25 rounds varying from 83 to 85 grains once again. To my surprise the over-pressure signs magically disappeared. Primers were not at all flat and no signs of gas getting past primers on all 25 rounds. I'm using Fed 215 primers.
I have never experienced anything like this before. I am using Norma brass, purchased about 6 months ago. I'm concluding there is something wrong with the primer pockets on my brass or the brass hardness is somehow out of whack. I've heard the 300 NM is hard on brass but seems odd to have a problem with new brass. I'll work up 25 more rounds with the reworked brass to confirm the overpressure signs are gone. Maybe I'm drawing a wrong conclusion and there is something else that is factoring in?
Any thoughts???
I have never experienced anything like this before. I am using Norma brass, purchased about 6 months ago. I'm concluding there is something wrong with the primer pockets on my brass or the brass hardness is somehow out of whack. I've heard the 300 NM is hard on brass but seems odd to have a problem with new brass. I'll work up 25 more rounds with the reworked brass to confirm the overpressure signs are gone. Maybe I'm drawing a wrong conclusion and there is something else that is factoring in?
Any thoughts???