I went to the range today to check a few loads and had some primers try to back out with a relatively small load. Heres what I was shooting:
Remington 700 action, .308, 26" bbl with 1/12 twist.
Remington once fired brass
CCI 200 primers
Nosler 168gr ballistic tips
I started with 42.5gr of Varget and worked up to 44gr in .5gr increments. The primers were raised on all 5 of the 42.5gr loadings. They were fairly flat on all but one of the 43gr loadings with the exception of the one that was raised. At 43.5gr the primers were relatively flat on two of the five rounds with the other three still having a decent radius on the edge of the primer. At 44gr they were consistently flat but not to the point that I would think there is a pressure problem. On all of the loadings there are no indications of the case flowing into the extractor nor was the bolt even slightly difficult to raise.
Is this caused by the Remington brass? Maybe the CCI primers? I really don't think it is pressure but I don't want to continue to increase the loadings until I get this figured out.
Remington 700 action, .308, 26" bbl with 1/12 twist.
Remington once fired brass
CCI 200 primers
Nosler 168gr ballistic tips
I started with 42.5gr of Varget and worked up to 44gr in .5gr increments. The primers were raised on all 5 of the 42.5gr loadings. They were fairly flat on all but one of the 43gr loadings with the exception of the one that was raised. At 43.5gr the primers were relatively flat on two of the five rounds with the other three still having a decent radius on the edge of the primer. At 44gr they were consistently flat but not to the point that I would think there is a pressure problem. On all of the loadings there are no indications of the case flowing into the extractor nor was the bolt even slightly difficult to raise.
Is this caused by the Remington brass? Maybe the CCI primers? I really don't think it is pressure but I don't want to continue to increase the loadings until I get this figured out.