I am curious about something here:
You wrote that you dry cycled live ammo to test for proper cycling and check for no accidental firing. This is fine and most likely, if you looked at the primer on those cycled and still live shells they were showing a small dimple or indent on primer surface caused by slight contact by floating fire pin.
Is there a small chance that one of these shells was loaded in mag again and caused that accident at the range.
Commercial ammo primers do not have the same cup hardness as for the Milsurp ammo or CCI #34 primers.
BB
You wrote that you dry cycled live ammo to test for proper cycling and check for no accidental firing. This is fine and most likely, if you looked at the primer on those cycled and still live shells they were showing a small dimple or indent on primer surface caused by slight contact by floating fire pin.
Is there a small chance that one of these shells was loaded in mag again and caused that accident at the range.
Commercial ammo primers do not have the same cup hardness as for the Milsurp ammo or CCI #34 primers.
BB
Yeah I'm aware of the floating firing pin thing. I cycled them out on the farm