is the Swede primer picky ? just noticed..I am down to 210 and 210 match and cci 200s..ouch
All my loading has been with 200's with no issues.
Mark
is the Swede primer picky ? just noticed..I am down to 210 and 210 match and cci 200s..ouch
If you look back in older loading manuals, you will see the lawyers have been hard at work on a lot things. I have data from older manuals that would curl the hair of the people that write the current manuals. Just like modern deer are more bulletproof than 50 years ago, modern loading components somehow magically produce much higher pressures than the same ones did decades ago.
Mark
Largely a function of improved methods of pressure testing. The copper crusher tests didn't show the very short pressure spikes very well. Really good article on it in the Speer #14, called "Why ballisticians get grey hair."
While it is probably very true that we have a better understanding of the pressures involved, it doesn't mean that we need to drop everything because we found a spike that has always been there and didn't cause actions to blow up for the past 100 years.
Just as finite element analysis allows us a much better view of stresses in structures and machine components, all the better pressure testing data does is show us a better picture of what has been proven safe for decades under actual use. It just means that the actions had a higher capacity for the peak pressures than previously thought.
Mark
As much as a load may be perfectly safe to use, the fact that for half a nanosecond, pressures spike to 150,000psi, makes printing that load a liability. The Speer #14 article really goes into this well, in that a lot of their favorite classic loads were showing up as unsafe, and they needed to figure out why.