I loaded up about 80 rounds Sat night and Sun morning to go to the range today (Sun) to work on refining some dope as well as just shoot some long range steel. Gameplan was to start at the 100 yd range and verify zero and then move to the 500m steel range to tweak 200, 300, 400 and 500m dope for my gun since it had just come back from a custom smith getting a new chamber, truing, threaded barrel, FTE brake, etc.
Here are the facts:
GUN: .308 SPS Tactical, 20", Factory barrel but just recently rechambered and trued and blue-printed
Load: 175 SMK/44.6 Varget/Lapua brass (probably 10-12 reloadings on the brass)/Fed 210
Environmentals: 100F, 3250 MSL, 7% RH
Load session: I loaded in two batches with different round counts on the brass. I had about 30 primed cases from a previous session that I never got around to shooting, so I loaded them up last night. I also pulled an additional 50 cases with 1-2 more loadings on them and full length resized, prepped and primed them to then finish up charging and seating bullets this a.m.
Background: I received the rifle back from the Smith about 3 weeks ago and I re-worked up my 175 SMK/Varget loads from my previous pet load. Previous accurate load in the factory chamber was 45.0. New load ended up being 44.6 and it chrono'd about 2615 when I did the original workups last week. That load shot fine with no pressure signs, but it was definitely on the "hot" side. Note that when I did those workups it was early in the am and the temp was about 70-75F.
OK, fast forward to today and I start shooting my 1st 5 rounds to verify zero before going to the longer range steel. 1st round fine - hits the bull. 2nd feels like bolt is a bit sticky and accuracy sucks. 3rd round I have to hammer the bolt handle with my hand to get it to open. Case looks like this:
Note I had it marked to throw away because the primer pocket was getting pretty loose. So figured the case was bad and shot the next two with the same result. On the 5th and final one the primer came out when it ejected off the bolt face. Needless to say I didn't shoot anymore of that batch. Here is the string of 5 in order:
The above were from the higher round count brass. I later tried a couple of the batch of 30 that were left over from the previous session. They shot fine with no issues and no pressure signs except maybe <span style="font-style: italic">just </span>a hint of a sticky bolt from time to time.
The 1st thing I thought of was uh oh, I must have over-charged the 2nd batch by mistakenly typing in 45.6 instead of 44.6 on my chargemaster or something like that. So as soon as I got home, I pulled all the bullets from the 2nd batch of 50 and re-weighed a random sample to see if I screwed up. Fortunately they were all exactly 44.6 as they should have been.
So I have 4 theories:
1) The brass was just at the end of its life and ready to fail.
2) The extra 30 degrees of temp pushed the load into the "over-pressure" range and caused the brass to fail
3) The tighter custom chamber is less tolerant of pressure spikes than the sloppy Factory Rem chamber used to be?
4) All of the above
What say the hive? I didn't keep a perfect record of the number of times the brass had been loaded, but it was somewhere around 10-12 loadings. I always FL resize with a Redding Comp FL bushing die if that means anything. I have lately been marking the occasional case to throw away as I noticed the primer pocket getting loose, but I've only been seeing a couple now out of every 50 on each load session.
Thanks in advance!
Here are the facts:
GUN: .308 SPS Tactical, 20", Factory barrel but just recently rechambered and trued and blue-printed
Load: 175 SMK/44.6 Varget/Lapua brass (probably 10-12 reloadings on the brass)/Fed 210
Environmentals: 100F, 3250 MSL, 7% RH
Load session: I loaded in two batches with different round counts on the brass. I had about 30 primed cases from a previous session that I never got around to shooting, so I loaded them up last night. I also pulled an additional 50 cases with 1-2 more loadings on them and full length resized, prepped and primed them to then finish up charging and seating bullets this a.m.
Background: I received the rifle back from the Smith about 3 weeks ago and I re-worked up my 175 SMK/Varget loads from my previous pet load. Previous accurate load in the factory chamber was 45.0. New load ended up being 44.6 and it chrono'd about 2615 when I did the original workups last week. That load shot fine with no pressure signs, but it was definitely on the "hot" side. Note that when I did those workups it was early in the am and the temp was about 70-75F.
OK, fast forward to today and I start shooting my 1st 5 rounds to verify zero before going to the longer range steel. 1st round fine - hits the bull. 2nd feels like bolt is a bit sticky and accuracy sucks. 3rd round I have to hammer the bolt handle with my hand to get it to open. Case looks like this:

Note I had it marked to throw away because the primer pocket was getting pretty loose. So figured the case was bad and shot the next two with the same result. On the 5th and final one the primer came out when it ejected off the bolt face. Needless to say I didn't shoot anymore of that batch. Here is the string of 5 in order:


The above were from the higher round count brass. I later tried a couple of the batch of 30 that were left over from the previous session. They shot fine with no issues and no pressure signs except maybe <span style="font-style: italic">just </span>a hint of a sticky bolt from time to time.
The 1st thing I thought of was uh oh, I must have over-charged the 2nd batch by mistakenly typing in 45.6 instead of 44.6 on my chargemaster or something like that. So as soon as I got home, I pulled all the bullets from the 2nd batch of 50 and re-weighed a random sample to see if I screwed up. Fortunately they were all exactly 44.6 as they should have been.
So I have 4 theories:
1) The brass was just at the end of its life and ready to fail.
2) The extra 30 degrees of temp pushed the load into the "over-pressure" range and caused the brass to fail
3) The tighter custom chamber is less tolerant of pressure spikes than the sloppy Factory Rem chamber used to be?
4) All of the above
What say the hive? I didn't keep a perfect record of the number of times the brass had been loaded, but it was somewhere around 10-12 loadings. I always FL resize with a Redding Comp FL bushing die if that means anything. I have lately been marking the occasional case to throw away as I noticed the primer pocket getting loose, but I've only been seeing a couple now out of every 50 on each load session.
Thanks in advance!