Your reply was a little short and cranky H4831, a alien space craft hovering over his house could have disrupted the magnetic field around his scales and thrown off that particular load.
All joking aside in the middle of his load development the chamber pressure took a nose dive which should not of happened. I'm going to guess his scales were bumped or set too low for that string of shots.
I'm also going to guess that you over dried your underwear in the dryer and its making you a little cranky.
I for one would have liked to find out what type of scales the OP has, if he drinks too much coffee and if his hands shake or if he had dirt on his glasses.
Signed
Smiling Ed
P.S. There is a chance the duct tape is loose on his press and he under torqued that load.
Thank you so much for analysing my inner thoughts. Usually, I have to pay a professional shrink for such service!
However, had you spent as much time in analysing the question the OP asked, as you did to my answer, your post may have made more sense.
In the original post the OP asked why there was unburned powder on the outside of some of his cases.
Several writers correctly told him why the unburned powder was there was because of lack of sufficient pressure in the case to expand the case enough to make it seal the gas from the chamber.
In his next post he made no note of all these correct answers, but still wondered why it happened.
My answer was meant to leave no doubt in his mind as to why there was unburned powder on the outside of his cases.
Apparently, I was successful, because in his next posting he thanked those who had helped him!
Had the OP asked the question of why there was not enough pressure to seal the chamber, I would have given him an answer, which would have been far more logical than the various excuses you answered to, while you were assuming he asked such question.
I would have answered that a logical reason only some of the apparently equally loaded cartridges failed to seal, was because the brass on those that failed was likely a bit harder, probably due to more firings without being annealed, than the rest of the cases.
In any event, the procedure the OP should take is to put more powder in the case, or to use a faster powder.
Annealing all the brass may solve the immediate problem, but that would only be solving the symptoms not the cause of the problem.