During an OCD moment, my brother loaded 1,000 rounds of .223. These were nice components...new Lake City brass, VMax bullets, CCI primers, and H335 powder. Ignoring the fact that he didn't trim the case length, he used a neck die that was set too low resulting in the shoulder getting pushed back by 1/32" - 1/16". The end result is that with the streched out neck and low shoulder these rounds are jamming my AR as the force of the bolt slamming closed creates a bulge along the incline of the shoulder. After 5 rounds I found myself using a rod and hammer to apply pressure against slide while second person pulled on charging handle for all their worth...
I plan to sort through the entire batch with a Case Gage to identify cartridges that might be an issue. My thought is to shoot these "problem" rounds through my bolt gun to fireform the case back to standard dimensions. My concern is that these rounds are at full powder loads. I am prepared to pull bullets and dump powder.
What is the recommended powder percentage (reduced load) for safely performing fireforming?
Thanks
I plan to sort through the entire batch with a Case Gage to identify cartridges that might be an issue. My thought is to shoot these "problem" rounds through my bolt gun to fireform the case back to standard dimensions. My concern is that these rounds are at full powder loads. I am prepared to pull bullets and dump powder.
What is the recommended powder percentage (reduced load) for safely performing fireforming?
Thanks