Pathfinder
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Northeast Ontario
I had the same craters with a recently made M-700 . I dont' have them on older 700's.
you can try a new or the next stronger Wolff spring.
a weak spring causes cratered primers more often than oversized holes, in fact the 'rounded' appearance of the cratering in the original post leads me to suspect a weak spring
Yukon, with this quote you hit the nail on the head, plumb centre!
"Now having gotten into it, it seems its pretty hard to beat the performance of the premium factory ammo.
Am I off base on this observation? Obviously, its still cheaper to load yourself, and for my .350RM, its pretty much the only way to go."
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Everybody that buys a press and dies thinks he can make better ammunition than the factories can. This is hogwash. Factory ammunition, all made with new components with very expensive, precise equipment, and constant checking, is good, accurate ammunition.
Now, I am ready for it, the great blast that will tell me they taylor their home built ammo to suit what their rifle "likes." This isn't all hogwash, only about 90% hogwash!
The facts are that a well bedded and tuned rifle will shoot any ammunition to the capabilities of the rifle involved. Col. Townsend Whelan made the famous statement, "Only accurate rifles are interesting." In all of his writings about shooting and accuracy, did he ever write anything about adjusting your ammuntion to what your rifle likes? Certainly not that I ever saw. Nor did any of the other writers of that famous era of shooting, ever write, that I ever read, anything about tayloring the ammunition to your rifle.
Warren Page, of benchrest fame, Jack O'Connor of hunting fame and Elmer Keith, of just fame, all were of the "Load them to the hilt," types.
Of course, better bullets would make better groups and some rifles will shoot a certain weight bullet better than other weights. Most 30-06 rifles have a 1 in 10" twist and that may be high for the lighter weight bullets. A good 30-06 barrel on a well tuned bolt action rifle, may shoot slightly different poi with different weight bullets, but all weights should shoot a good group, with the 200 and 220 maybe being best of all.
And to the OP, I don't think you have to worry about high pressure with any of the loads shot in the brass you have pictures of. Please listen to what many have told you, and don't equate the cratering with high pressure.
As a follow up, I went up to the range with a Chrony to get some solid data.
All 160 gr Accubonds.
So:
52 gr Rl-19-~2590 FPS @ 10'
53 gr Rl-19-~2624 FPS @ 10'
53 gr Rl-22-~2523 FPS @ 10'
Federal TBT 160 gr 2738 vs 2800 published.
Seems to me that all the above loads are pretty light, and that I am not getting excess pressure signs.
I should have added - "or so I am told". Not a gunsmith, but I have been dealing with the same types of primer issues.
Would Remington replace a weak spring under warranty or is that something I would need to ask and pay to have done. My gun has just been sent away for warranty repair work (i.e., a small ridge around the primer ejector hole that appears to be causing premature ejector marks on my brass).
Should have mentioned my .280 has a 24" barrel. Would having the chrony 10' away vs RIGHT at the muzzle account for that difference?that factory load measured surprisingly bang-on, since the factory velocity is rated with a 24" barrel.