I'm going to post this here because it was done in the course of "precision shooting";
Today I shot at a "Tactical / Pecision" match and it was HOT, around 30-35'C hot.
My usual load of preference in my .223 Rem T3 action is 24.4gr of Varget, CCI Br4s, Winchester brass and Berger 80gr VLDs. I've fired probably 300-400 rounds of this load all with the same brass. I have been running the brass through a Lee Collet neck sizing die. During my last outing I notice that the bolt was stiff after firing a few rounds but there was no flat primer problem. I went home and ran the brass though a Redding full length sizing die and reloaded the ammo with the same load.
Today, after shooting (my bad) is when I noticed that the primers on all my fired brass are very flat. During shooting I never notice any sticking bolt problems. So ...
a) did I resize my brass too short and thus greatly increase pressure?
B) did the high tempreature today increase the pressure enough to cause flat primers (I don't think I've been shooting this load in tempreartures over 25'C?
And most importantly, IS THIS DANGEROUS??? If its not the end of the world I will fire off the remaing 14 rounds on a cooler day.
Or, can I load up what's left of these full length sized cases and keep shooting the same load to fireform them again? Other wise, I may buy a new batch of brass.
Thoughts???
Today I shot at a "Tactical / Pecision" match and it was HOT, around 30-35'C hot.
My usual load of preference in my .223 Rem T3 action is 24.4gr of Varget, CCI Br4s, Winchester brass and Berger 80gr VLDs. I've fired probably 300-400 rounds of this load all with the same brass. I have been running the brass through a Lee Collet neck sizing die. During my last outing I notice that the bolt was stiff after firing a few rounds but there was no flat primer problem. I went home and ran the brass though a Redding full length sizing die and reloaded the ammo with the same load.
Today, after shooting (my bad) is when I noticed that the primers on all my fired brass are very flat. During shooting I never notice any sticking bolt problems. So ...
a) did I resize my brass too short and thus greatly increase pressure?
B) did the high tempreature today increase the pressure enough to cause flat primers (I don't think I've been shooting this load in tempreartures over 25'C?
And most importantly, IS THIS DANGEROUS??? If its not the end of the world I will fire off the remaing 14 rounds on a cooler day.
Or, can I load up what's left of these full length sized cases and keep shooting the same load to fireform them again? Other wise, I may buy a new batch of brass.
Thoughts???