Armory Sponsor
Posted: 9/22/2012 7:40:10 PM EDT
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Thanks for that. I've heard the description, but have never seen one. |
| The op's 223 separation in the body needs to adjust how much the shoulder is pushed back on FL sizing. The others, 45acp & 223(range pickup) are signs of over pressure. Photos |
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Quoted: I had a nasty kaboom with a 45acp a few months back. Wasn't a hot load or anything, just a worn out case. Didn't do any damage to the gun (XD 45), but sure gave me a good scare. http://www.btfh.net/posting/kaboom.jpg Damn dude, that is a nasty one. |
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Quoted:
The op's 223 separation in the body needs to adjust how much the shoulder is pushed back on FL sizing. The others, 45acp & 223(range pickup) are signs of over pressure. Photos While I'll agree that over pressure was the cause. That case head is still split in two place's. |
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We had a guy several years ago who had a case failure in a 1911 .45ACP.
Didn't hurt the gun much. Blew out the magazine and cracked a grip panel, but a little sliver of brass blew down the left rail past the ejector and directly into his right eye. He wasn't wearing glasses and lost the eye. Jeff www.FirearmsCoalition.org www.GunVoter.org |
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Quoted:
We had a guy several years ago who had a case failure in a 1911 .45ACP. Didn't hurt the gun much. Blew out the magazine and cracked a grip panel, but a little sliver of brass blew down the left rail past the ejector and directly into his right eye. He wasn't wearing glasses and lost the eye. Jeff www.FirearmsCoalition.org www.GunVoter.org Idiot |
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Quoted:
Here's another one to watch out for: http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0767.jpg http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0770.jpg http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0765.jpg First time reload of a commercially-reprocessed LC Case..probably machinegin fired. Goes with the territory. Who processed the brass? In the past, a company that sized their brass with rollers. Some of them shows the case head failure like yours. 'Borg |
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Quoted:
Here's another one to watch out for: http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0767.jpg http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0770.jpg http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/drshame/DSC_0765.jpg First time reload of a commercially-reprocessed LC Case..probably machinegin fired. Goes with the territory. Those are the dangerous ones. Otherswise, separations forward of the web are held together by the chamber dia. and the bolt face during max. press. Those rounds that show structural damage through the case head are incipient case head failures that dump hot plasma out into the bolt face, upper receiver, bolt cavity, bolt carrier, and magazine well at max.press. |
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No idea how many times that particular case has been reloaded, can't be more than three or four. Why aren't you tracking how many times rifle cases are fired? They have a definite lifespan, you need to keep close track of rifle calibers and keep them segregated. You can get away with not tracking on pistol calibers, NOT RIFLE CALIBERS. |
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Quoted: No idea how many times that particular case has been reloaded, can't be more than three or four. Why aren't you tracking how many times rifle cases are fired? They have a definite lifespan, you need to keep close track of rifle calibers and keep them segregated. You can get away with not tracking on pistol calibers, NOT RIFLE CALIBERS. Because it's a pain in the ass and my memory sucks and sometimes I forget to label coffee cans or buckets and...well you get the picture. I've got brass I've kept up with but I also have brass that got "forgot". I may need a bucket marked "fuck if I know" for those.This is a reminder though that I need to make extra effort to not forget and keep up with loadings and pay extra attention when inspecting brass. |
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From the pictures I see, it appears like it's a 'head spacing' issue. It could also be just old brass, but how many people check head spacing on their loaded rounds? I have a Wilson head space guage that every round goes through before I shoot it. Too little head spacing causes excessive wear on the action, and too much head spacing will result in case failure, like the pictures in this thread show. Buy a guage, they're worth it.
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The case is LC 06. No idea how many times that particular case has been reloaded, can't be more than three or four. I feel a little let down that I didn't get to use my broken shell extractor that I bought years ago when I got into loading 223.




















