- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
Many, if not most of my attempts to blow up a rifle failed on the first attempt. You really have to try hard. This is why a smile when someone worries about his OAL or switching primers and gets lots of internet advice of danger.
Even a case full of pistol powder in a rifle cannot be relied upon to blow up the rifle every time. Sometimes it just brazes the action closed with vaporized brass.
One day I was shooting cast bullet loads in my M-17 .30/06 Enfield, the load was a 210 gr gas checked bullet over 25 grs of SR-4759. It was a nice day, and I laying prone in the warm sunshine, blissfully shooting the popgun loads, the chronograph telling me that 1850 was typical of the velocity. All of a sudden my ears where ringing, my shoulder felt like I just touched off a .300 magnum, and the chronograph suggested a velocity of 2850 . . . double charge! I tapped open the bolt with a short length of 2X4, the case ejected, but it looked different; the primer pocket now extended out to the lettering on the case head, and the flash hole was the same size as the primer pocket. The bolt face was permanently engraved with lettering from the case head. That rifle saw several more years of service, and remained accurate and reliable, despite the mishap, until it was lost in the house fire mentioned in the post above.
Anyway, I know exactly how that overload occurred. It was one of those nights where the interruptions wouldn't stop, and when I returned to the bench, I was frustrated, and rather than dumping the case to ensure it was empty, I charged it . . . AGAIN! So boys and girls, if you're interrupted while handloading, stop the process, and dump the case that is next in line to be charged, before continuing. I keep the prepped brass neck down in the loading block, so the one that's upright is the next one in line for powder. Whatever system you use to keep track of where you're at, never, never, never charge a cartridge as the first step you take, after being called away from the bench. Some might say that its inherently dangerous to use loads that take up less than half the volume of the cartridge, because a double charge might not be detected, but as with all handloading, a good loading procedure will keep you safe.
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