There is a slot in the bolthead for the ejector. You can see the resulting ejector mark on the case beside the 95; directly opposite, the extractor has left its mark near the J.
The primer appearance is the result of the design of the rifle. The ejector and extractor marks are not the results of an over pressure cartridge.
The firing pin hole was deliberately chamfered during manufacture.
The explanation that I heard was that the chamfering prevents primers from blanking, leaving little discs in the firing pin hole.
Hi All
I took my XCR to the range this weekend and noticed that the brass was showing signs of high pressure, really high.
To the point that the primer is sticking out.
A buddy shot 5 rounds of my ammo with his 10.5" AR and the primer was very flattened as well and compared to his Norinco ammo that is from an older lot, even the recoil is noticeably more.
My XCR's barrel is stamped 223.
Ammo head stamp is C J 95
What could be the issue here? Ammo out of spec (too hot)?
Should I stop using this ammo in my XCR and stick to my AR for it??
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Thanks!
Sounds good.
I shoot only Norinco ammo, bought over2k rounds in a sale and it was cheaper than buying just the brass.
Once I run out of ammo, I'll reload.