At the range there was the odd one of my 45-70 loads that the Marlin lever would not completely close on. At home I measured everything about the cartridge, couldn't find any reason why it wouldn't completely chamber.
Then noticed a very slightly protruding primer on the two that wouldn't seat. Pull the bullet, dump the powder, close my eyes and give the primer a solid push on the press. Primer in, reload and at the range it went in OK and fired.
Noticed it takes extra push on the press handle every time to seat the primer completely flush. Even with all this extra care, had one more the lever wouldn't close on. Very slightly protruding primer. Remembered that all of my earlier loads were loaded light and I used large pistol primers. Didn't have this problem.
So, started measuring things. Win large pistol primers are .119", top to bottom.
Fed. large rifle, which I have been using, are .127" high.
CCI large rifle mag, .125".
Used the tail of the digital calipers to measure the depth of primer pockets in cases.
W-W 243 case, .126 deep.
30-06 Federal case, .127 deep.
New Remington 45-70 cases, .115" deep! Meaured several, all same.
Don't think this is only Remington cases, either. Have some "no name," just the two stars on the cartridge face, connected with an arc. Didn't have one available to test at the moment, but they were the first that wouldn't completey seat in the Marlin, so quit using them.
We always say to test every cartridge in the chamber, before going on a hunt or a shooting match. But, the aggravting part of this is that I can only test them in the chamber at the range. By leaving the action open, one can safely drop the cartridge in the chamber. When it hits bottom with a sharp clunk, you know it goes in the chamber and tipping the rifle up will remove it. But with the protruding primer the cause, one must close the action completely, seeing that the lever fully closes. This is altogether too dangerous to even think of doing in the basement, so is done at the range.
The rifle seems so tight on headspace that a primer protruding so slightly that it can oly be detected by sliding a sharp edged instrument over the case head to check, will find it. In other words, I visually inspect every primer, but even so, have missed seeing one or two that wouldn't load.
It seems amazing that the primers I am using have to be compressed about .o13 to properly seat.
Has anyone else encountered anything like this?
Then noticed a very slightly protruding primer on the two that wouldn't seat. Pull the bullet, dump the powder, close my eyes and give the primer a solid push on the press. Primer in, reload and at the range it went in OK and fired.
Noticed it takes extra push on the press handle every time to seat the primer completely flush. Even with all this extra care, had one more the lever wouldn't close on. Very slightly protruding primer. Remembered that all of my earlier loads were loaded light and I used large pistol primers. Didn't have this problem.
So, started measuring things. Win large pistol primers are .119", top to bottom.
Fed. large rifle, which I have been using, are .127" high.
CCI large rifle mag, .125".
Used the tail of the digital calipers to measure the depth of primer pockets in cases.
W-W 243 case, .126 deep.
30-06 Federal case, .127 deep.
New Remington 45-70 cases, .115" deep! Meaured several, all same.
Don't think this is only Remington cases, either. Have some "no name," just the two stars on the cartridge face, connected with an arc. Didn't have one available to test at the moment, but they were the first that wouldn't completey seat in the Marlin, so quit using them.
We always say to test every cartridge in the chamber, before going on a hunt or a shooting match. But, the aggravting part of this is that I can only test them in the chamber at the range. By leaving the action open, one can safely drop the cartridge in the chamber. When it hits bottom with a sharp clunk, you know it goes in the chamber and tipping the rifle up will remove it. But with the protruding primer the cause, one must close the action completely, seeing that the lever fully closes. This is altogether too dangerous to even think of doing in the basement, so is done at the range.
The rifle seems so tight on headspace that a primer protruding so slightly that it can oly be detected by sliding a sharp edged instrument over the case head to check, will find it. In other words, I visually inspect every primer, but even so, have missed seeing one or two that wouldn't load.
It seems amazing that the primers I am using have to be compressed about .o13 to properly seat.
Has anyone else encountered anything like this?