For safety, I weight all completed rounds. Surprisingly, there is little variation since I sort my brass in .1gn lots and weight my charges with an SD503. When one of them looked suspicious (.7gn high, turns out the case dropped down from the bin above) I went to pull it apart. I placed the round in my impact bullet puller and wacked it against a rawhide mallet on the floor. Usually it takes two or three whacks, but this time four didn't do the trick (I try to keep the noise down in the house. I reload in my home office/mancave.) The fifth time I wacked it I saw a flash, heard a pop, and realized that the primer had detonated.
After verifying that my underwear was not in need of changing, I looked at the primer pocket. My first thought was that the primer had been inserted upside down. No, I would have noticed that when inserting in the puller, and in any event, there was no sign of a spent primer and the primer pocket was black. We're talking a loaded round here. I then gave thanks that I had not perforated the floor of my office (second floor), much less hit anyone downstairs. I have heard that bullets detonating outside a firearm, such as in a fire, will not really go anywhere, but I do not wish to test that theory. Somehow the load of Varget had not ignited. I am having serious reservations about using an impact bullet puller again. On the other hand, I have a collet type puller, but since the ogive starts just outside the case, I have had no luck in grabbing the bullet. Someone at my last competition suggested using a one-size smaller collet. I'll have to order one. Anyone have luck with that?
After verifying that my underwear was not in need of changing, I looked at the primer pocket. My first thought was that the primer had been inserted upside down. No, I would have noticed that when inserting in the puller, and in any event, there was no sign of a spent primer and the primer pocket was black. We're talking a loaded round here. I then gave thanks that I had not perforated the floor of my office (second floor), much less hit anyone downstairs. I have heard that bullets detonating outside a firearm, such as in a fire, will not really go anywhere, but I do not wish to test that theory. Somehow the load of Varget had not ignited. I am having serious reservations about using an impact bullet puller again. On the other hand, I have a collet type puller, but since the ogive starts just outside the case, I have had no luck in grabbing the bullet. Someone at my last competition suggested using a one-size smaller collet. I'll have to order one. Anyone have luck with that?
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