Rez Exelon
AH enthusiast
So last weekend I picked up a package of stuff at a show that included 15 rounds of 416 Rigby. Not that I needed it since I don't own one, but I'm not going to turn down the freebie right? Well, I debated if I wanted to leave them intact but my policy of "never trust other people's reloads" won, and this thread will illustrate why I have that policy.
Example A shows some of the rounds as they got to me. Looked nice and uniform all Norma head stamps. Two things jumped out. First I usually seat further the the groove. Second, they weren't crimped. So definitely rule out factory ammo IMHO.
Now, as cool as it'd be to hang onto the rounds even without a gun, I flagged them for take down. Two rounds in, nothing special happened. But on the third, it looked a little different. Put side by side to the other, something just looked off.
Hard to see, but the rounds had two completely different types of powder. One stick and one ball. The ball I should note was also a compressed load evidenced by the hard pack of powder in the case and sticking to the bottom of the bullets.
Out of the 15, three were the ball powder ones. One case didn't sit in the shell holder right either.
Maybe nothing would have been wrong if fired --- who knows, maybe they were matched in load dev. But there were sure some big red flags. I'll deprime and tumble the brass and store it and recycle the bullets to other rounds and call it good.
Example A shows some of the rounds as they got to me. Looked nice and uniform all Norma head stamps. Two things jumped out. First I usually seat further the the groove. Second, they weren't crimped. So definitely rule out factory ammo IMHO.
Now, as cool as it'd be to hang onto the rounds even without a gun, I flagged them for take down. Two rounds in, nothing special happened. But on the third, it looked a little different. Put side by side to the other, something just looked off.
Hard to see, but the rounds had two completely different types of powder. One stick and one ball. The ball I should note was also a compressed load evidenced by the hard pack of powder in the case and sticking to the bottom of the bullets.
Out of the 15, three were the ball powder ones. One case didn't sit in the shell holder right either.
Maybe nothing would have been wrong if fired --- who knows, maybe they were matched in load dev. But there were sure some big red flags. I'll deprime and tumble the brass and store it and recycle the bullets to other rounds and call it good.