I bought a Remington R-15 a few months ago to use for coyote hunting. I have probably put 150 rounds through it so far- mostly factory, and probably 30 handloads.
Today I was shooting at the range, using a front rest and rear sandbag. I was shooting my own handloads, with one in the chamber and 2 in a 10 round magazine. The trigger pull on this rifle is kind of long and heavy, and as I was shooting for group I was squeezing very slowly and carefully.
When the rifle fired, it sent 2 rounds downrange like it was a full-auto. It reminded me of a shotgun doubling- something I have experienced once and would not prefer to do again. It happened much faster than I could ever pull the trigger for aimed shots.
When I removed the remaining round from the chamber there was a very tiny dimple in the primer.
I fired the remaining round, with another in the same magazine using the same trigger pull- it operated normally this time.
A few notes- I am a pretty experienced handloader and have never had problems like this before, but my experience is mostly with bolt rifles.
I have a Dillon case gage- all cases were in spec.
Primers were Winchester small rifle.
So, did I have a slamfire or was there enough movement of the rifle during recoil that I basically pulled the trigger twice incredibly fast? Or something else?
Thanks for any input.
Matalpa
Today I was shooting at the range, using a front rest and rear sandbag. I was shooting my own handloads, with one in the chamber and 2 in a 10 round magazine. The trigger pull on this rifle is kind of long and heavy, and as I was shooting for group I was squeezing very slowly and carefully.
When the rifle fired, it sent 2 rounds downrange like it was a full-auto. It reminded me of a shotgun doubling- something I have experienced once and would not prefer to do again. It happened much faster than I could ever pull the trigger for aimed shots.
When I removed the remaining round from the chamber there was a very tiny dimple in the primer.
I fired the remaining round, with another in the same magazine using the same trigger pull- it operated normally this time.
A few notes- I am a pretty experienced handloader and have never had problems like this before, but my experience is mostly with bolt rifles.
I have a Dillon case gage- all cases were in spec.
Primers were Winchester small rifle.
So, did I have a slamfire or was there enough movement of the rifle during recoil that I basically pulled the trigger twice incredibly fast? Or something else?
Thanks for any input.
Matalpa