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one of us |
Just gazing lovingly at some spent .22/250 cases, checking them over for signs of excess pressure. That smudge/fouling around the outside of the case neck - does it tell me anything? | ||
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one of us |
Yes. Tells you it's normal. If it's below the neck you are getting improper sealing. Bob | |||
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one of us |
Thanks guys, but why exactly is there such a difference in the amount of smudge between the factory loads I'm using up and my home loads? | |||
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<Don G> |
How many times have you reloaded the cases? Have you annealed them? As the brass gets work hardened it is slower to seal. It can also have a lot to do with the powder type and load. Slower powders do more of this, as do lighter loads in my experience. If it does not go below the neck it is not a safety factor, in my book. Don | ||
one of us |
Hi Don, Mostly reloaded for the first time (Federal ex-factory rounds), some twice or three times. Not annealed. Powder is H380 and loads are now between 36.4 and 38.9 grains, with 55 gr bullets. I appreciate there may not be a safety issue here, in which case its just nice to know what the signs are and how to read them. | |||
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Moderator |
Take a look at my related thread further down this forum. Your not the only one with this problem! My mate is back off holiday now, so we'll be investigating further. Pete | |||
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one of us |
Pete E. I've just read your thread. FWIW, I'm only neck sizing and not crimping. I'll keep up with your thread. | |||
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one of us |
The answer to your question is that you are using too slow a powder..Go to the next faster powder or so and it will stop...Example 4831 to 4350 to 4320 and on until it quits.. ------------------ | |||
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one of us |
Ray, Thanks for that. Could you possibly explain what's happening and how a faster powder will change things? | |||
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