Just prepped and did the entire process on a bunch of 3 times fired 5.56 LC brass that I've been shooting out of my Mk12Mod1.
Come to the point of seating the primer, and a good 1 in 3 give me next to zero resistance when putting the primer in. I'm assuming this is from the high pressure loadings I've shot out of them, but the real question is, are these rounds going to perform differently?
They seat just fine, and if I smack the brass on a table a few times they don't move or come out so I'm actually not sure on how lose it even is other than when seating them, some you don't even get the primer seating 'pushback' from.
I'm not worried about brass life or anything like that for the 5.56 as I have a ton of brass for it, but am curious if shooting these now will give me different velocities/pressure/performance/FPS shifts/higher spreads because of the primer pocket being so open/loose or just shoot them and then toss them?
Doing load work ups, so an outside variable screwing with groups, velocities, extreme spreads and deviations is a huge problem right now.
Come to the point of seating the primer, and a good 1 in 3 give me next to zero resistance when putting the primer in. I'm assuming this is from the high pressure loadings I've shot out of them, but the real question is, are these rounds going to perform differently?
They seat just fine, and if I smack the brass on a table a few times they don't move or come out so I'm actually not sure on how lose it even is other than when seating them, some you don't even get the primer seating 'pushback' from.
I'm not worried about brass life or anything like that for the 5.56 as I have a ton of brass for it, but am curious if shooting these now will give me different velocities/pressure/performance/FPS shifts/higher spreads because of the primer pocket being so open/loose or just shoot them and then toss them?
Doing load work ups, so an outside variable screwing with groups, velocities, extreme spreads and deviations is a huge problem right now.