I’ve got a real head-scratcher going on and I presently can’t even figure out how to figure out what it going on.
I’m developing and putting together loads for my upcoming buffalo hunt.
Started the process with previously-fired brass, using my Lee collet dies to maximize case life. Roughed in a load, then went to full-length sized and crimped and finally over to new brass (same brand), full-length sized and crimped. Finally, I made up a batch of ammo as follows:
New brass, full-length size, clean off sizing lube, trim, debur, inspect, prime, powder, seat (length adjusted to 0.375 datum as determined in load development), Lee factory crimp, feed check.
I loaded up the solids a few days ago and all went smooth as silk. Cartridges all fed well.
Tonight I started seating softs and something was just not right. A lot of them were very hard to start and I even managed to buckle a few necks. I’ve already developed the load with these cases and these bullets and haven’t had any problems but tonight it was as if the necks were just too tight to seat the bullets properly. I got about 20 seated and ruined about 5 cases and decided I needed to sort things out before ruining anything else.
To make matters worse, when I went to feed check them, a few fed fine and then the fourth one I checked wasnt even close to feeding. I thought maybe I somehow didn’t seat the bullet deep enough but it checks out perfect. I’m 2/100ths off the lands on the ones that feed and the ones that don’t. No obvious differences visually and everything I could measure with a caliper seems to be the same. I’m completely baffled. I can’t figure out why it’s suddenly very hard to seat the bullets, like way too much neck tension nor can I figure out why not all the rounds feed.
The solids seem fine. The only differences I know of on the softs is the bullet, and I’ve used the softs (same box) in developing the load so I know those worked. Also, I haven’t put the factory crimp on the softs yet because I may be tearing them down. I checked the loads with and without the crimp during development and they worked fine either way.
I did do the solids as one batch and the softs as a separate batch so perhaps I set up the sizing die incorrectly somehow? If I did, I’d expect all the rounds not to feed rather than some to be just fine and others to not even be close.
I’m developing and putting together loads for my upcoming buffalo hunt.
Started the process with previously-fired brass, using my Lee collet dies to maximize case life. Roughed in a load, then went to full-length sized and crimped and finally over to new brass (same brand), full-length sized and crimped. Finally, I made up a batch of ammo as follows:
New brass, full-length size, clean off sizing lube, trim, debur, inspect, prime, powder, seat (length adjusted to 0.375 datum as determined in load development), Lee factory crimp, feed check.
I loaded up the solids a few days ago and all went smooth as silk. Cartridges all fed well.
Tonight I started seating softs and something was just not right. A lot of them were very hard to start and I even managed to buckle a few necks. I’ve already developed the load with these cases and these bullets and haven’t had any problems but tonight it was as if the necks were just too tight to seat the bullets properly. I got about 20 seated and ruined about 5 cases and decided I needed to sort things out before ruining anything else.
To make matters worse, when I went to feed check them, a few fed fine and then the fourth one I checked wasnt even close to feeding. I thought maybe I somehow didn’t seat the bullet deep enough but it checks out perfect. I’m 2/100ths off the lands on the ones that feed and the ones that don’t. No obvious differences visually and everything I could measure with a caliper seems to be the same. I’m completely baffled. I can’t figure out why it’s suddenly very hard to seat the bullets, like way too much neck tension nor can I figure out why not all the rounds feed.
The solids seem fine. The only differences I know of on the softs is the bullet, and I’ve used the softs (same box) in developing the load so I know those worked. Also, I haven’t put the factory crimp on the softs yet because I may be tearing them down. I checked the loads with and without the crimp during development and they worked fine either way.
I did do the solids as one batch and the softs as a separate batch so perhaps I set up the sizing die incorrectly somehow? If I did, I’d expect all the rounds not to feed rather than some to be just fine and others to not even be close.