I have a question for some of you long time reloaders on the Hide.
I have been reloading for a decade or so and haven't had any issues with case head separation until now. For my .30-06 I have what started out as 500 pieces, maybe a little less now, of Winchester brass that I cycle through. I have been reloading this same brass since 2008 when I bought the rifle. I can't say for sure as I have moved a bunch since then but I believe I only have 5, maybe 6 firings on this brass. Most of the loads have been stout loads with reloader 22 and the 190gr SMK and more recently the 208 gr amax with H4831sc.
Little history,
I have always FL sized until the last two firings when I started neck sizing with the Redding bushing die. I have always had issues with some cartridges requiring some force to chamber, I attributed this to a tight chamber combined with my sizing die loosening up while processing the brass in one sitting. After Neck sizing for the first time on the previous loading, I decided to run all my brass through the body die that came with my Neck sizing die to ensure smooth chambering and I planned on neck sizing only until chambering became sticky again.
Next variable,
I upped my charge weight from 60gr of H4831sc to 61gr of H4831sc under a 208 gr AMAx after doing some more load development. During this load development I had a partially separated case head at 61.0 gr but attributed it to a bum piece of brass. No pressure signs, primers were still rounded on the edges and no ejector swipes.
I loaded up 50 rounds at 61.0 gr which I shot today. Out of the 50 I had 4 partial case separations and 15 cases that showed a visible white line where they were about to give.
My first thought is that the body die inner diameter is too small and overworked my brass, trashing it. I don't have a way to measure it other can calipers, but the base of the die measures larger than the base of my RCBS FL die. The body die measures 0.462 while the FL die measures 0.461. I know the dies are tapered so to measure the same point (hopefully) I stuck the calipers in until the flat part of the caliper was all the way into the die of the body, so the point I am measuring is approximately 3/8" into the cavity.
Summary:
Loadings 1-4 (or so): FL sized, 190gr SMK w/RL22, 208gr AMAX w/RL22
Loading 5: Neck sized only, 208 gr AMAX 60gr H4831
Loading 6: Body sized and Neck sized, 208gr AMAX 61.0 H4831sc Case head separations
My question:
Is this normal? From what I understand it is not. I have had much better case life from Winchester brass with stout loads in my .308. primer pockets usually being the first to go.
If this is not normal then what do you suspect is the culprit, or what can I do to figure it out?. I don't want buy new brass and trash it in a few loadings. At this point I am pretty suspect of the 400+ cases I just body sized and neck sized. 4 failures and 15 almost failures out of 50 rounds isn't really something I care to repeat for 400 more shots. Should I just cut my losses and be happy with 5-6 loadings and call it good?
Thanks,
Maarten
I have been reloading for a decade or so and haven't had any issues with case head separation until now. For my .30-06 I have what started out as 500 pieces, maybe a little less now, of Winchester brass that I cycle through. I have been reloading this same brass since 2008 when I bought the rifle. I can't say for sure as I have moved a bunch since then but I believe I only have 5, maybe 6 firings on this brass. Most of the loads have been stout loads with reloader 22 and the 190gr SMK and more recently the 208 gr amax with H4831sc.
Little history,
I have always FL sized until the last two firings when I started neck sizing with the Redding bushing die. I have always had issues with some cartridges requiring some force to chamber, I attributed this to a tight chamber combined with my sizing die loosening up while processing the brass in one sitting. After Neck sizing for the first time on the previous loading, I decided to run all my brass through the body die that came with my Neck sizing die to ensure smooth chambering and I planned on neck sizing only until chambering became sticky again.
Next variable,
I upped my charge weight from 60gr of H4831sc to 61gr of H4831sc under a 208 gr AMAx after doing some more load development. During this load development I had a partially separated case head at 61.0 gr but attributed it to a bum piece of brass. No pressure signs, primers were still rounded on the edges and no ejector swipes.
I loaded up 50 rounds at 61.0 gr which I shot today. Out of the 50 I had 4 partial case separations and 15 cases that showed a visible white line where they were about to give.
My first thought is that the body die inner diameter is too small and overworked my brass, trashing it. I don't have a way to measure it other can calipers, but the base of the die measures larger than the base of my RCBS FL die. The body die measures 0.462 while the FL die measures 0.461. I know the dies are tapered so to measure the same point (hopefully) I stuck the calipers in until the flat part of the caliper was all the way into the die of the body, so the point I am measuring is approximately 3/8" into the cavity.
Summary:
Loadings 1-4 (or so): FL sized, 190gr SMK w/RL22, 208gr AMAX w/RL22
Loading 5: Neck sized only, 208 gr AMAX 60gr H4831
Loading 6: Body sized and Neck sized, 208gr AMAX 61.0 H4831sc Case head separations
My question:
Is this normal? From what I understand it is not. I have had much better case life from Winchester brass with stout loads in my .308. primer pockets usually being the first to go.
If this is not normal then what do you suspect is the culprit, or what can I do to figure it out?. I don't want buy new brass and trash it in a few loadings. At this point I am pretty suspect of the 400+ cases I just body sized and neck sized. 4 failures and 15 almost failures out of 50 rounds isn't really something I care to repeat for 400 more shots. Should I just cut my losses and be happy with 5-6 loadings and call it good?
Thanks,
Maarten