Shot my first young buck. Shaken up after a malfunction.

Overall length is an ever changing number no matter how carefully you load....obviously a few are way too long if they are jamming into the lands. Likely all you need to do is back off the lands a bit and you'll be fine.
 
Could have sworn I posted this in Reloading but I don't see this there. Maybe I forgot to press Post. Apologize if this shows up as a double post.

Got a young buck this morning. What a crazy story. First I thought it was a doe. 40 yards away. First shot. Positive I'm right on. BANG! Deer just stands there; obviously not hit. Just startled. I reload. How could I have missed? All that practice. Next shot BANG! Right in the heart. Deer on ground. Dies within 15 seconds.

Deer cleaned out etc. We move to another blind. I try to load up there cannot!

Check my barrel for obstructions. There is a bullet lodged in the chamber. Holy s$&@!

Go back to the camp as my cleaning supplies are not with me. Bullet now out but I'm shaken up.

First, at least I'm not as bad a shot as I was. But how did this happen. First shot sure didn't sound like a squib load. Loud, primer and powder seemed to ignite fine.

Obviously the first shot did not exit the barrel and the second hit the first which killed the deer??

Bullet came out of the chamber with a cleaning rod without much coaxing. Tip is not damaged so I'm perplexed.

I've loaded 500 rounds now with never a problem. I'm SUPER careful. Obviously I'm shaken up as I must have screwed something up and almost killed myself the first time hunting. Only thing that makes sense is that there wasn't powder in that first round and the primer pushed the bullet out into the chamber but not right out?
Your second round must have been the dud , the first shot hit but it wasn't an instant kill, it happens and it was probably a coincidence the buck you thought was a doe dropped after the second shot.
 
Gentlemen, thank you for the ongoing mentorship. I've learned a ton on here.

One disappointing thing I've learned on this hunt is as much as I love my FN Winchester 70 30-06, I think I would prefer a hunting rifle with a magazine. Would not have made a difference here but that's just and aside. Next year is a moose hunt. Maybe Ill have to get a 35 Whelen in such a configuration.
 
Your second round must have been the dud , the first shot hit but it wasn't an instant kill, it happens and it was probably a coincidence the buck you thought was a doe dropped after the second shot.

I suspect the first shot was probably a miss... having the bullet jammed up against the lands will raise pressures, and could cause a change in the point of impact. You don't need to crimp, just seat them a little deeper.

I'm not sure why you think you need a detachable mag, but I hate the things, and won't own a gun that has one unless it's a .22. Just one more thing to lose or forget.
 
Mystery solved. I just had a round chambered and ejected it to have powder fall out and no bullet. So looks like this is a problem with my bullets being uncrimped or a bit too long or both? I recall now ejecting the third round and having to work the bolt to get it out.
So what criteria did you use to determine COL for the particular bullet in question? And have you ever had to pull a seated bullet with no crimp? It takes some force to get it moving.

I always try to reference the manufacturers COL when working up a new load. BUT I always make sure any new bullet selection will fit in the magazine, chamber and eject. This is performed with an unprimed, full length sized case.

And, as always, I keep track of what I did/happened in an Excel spreadsheet.
 
I suspect the first shot was probably a miss... having the bullet jammed up against the lands will raise pressures, and could cause a change in the point of impact. You don't need to crimp, just seat them a little deeper.

I'm not sure why you think you need a detachable mag, but I hate the things, and won't own a gun that has one unless it's a .22. Just one more thing to lose or forget.

I prefer detachable mags myself.... I do a lot of spot and stalk which requires driving to different locations.... having detachable mag means easy loading and unloading.....
 
So what criteria did you use to determine COL for the particular bullet in question? And have you ever had to pull a seated bullet with no crimp? It takes some force to get it moving.

I always try to reference the manufacturers COL when working up a new load. BUT I always make sure any new bullet selection will fit in the magazine, chamber and eject. This is performed with an unprimed, full length sized case.

And, as always, I keep track of what I did/happened in an Excel spreadsheet.

I used a Sinclair OAL gauge and seated .015" from the lands. Pretty sure I chambered these rounds (samples) and ejected. Not all the rounds I loaded have this problem in this batch. I'm guessing I'm just too close to the lands and there is no margin of error.
 
I used a Sinclair OAL gauge and seated .015" from the lands. Pretty sure I chambered these rounds (samples) and ejected. Not all the rounds I loaded have this problem in this batch. I'm guessing I'm just too close to the lands and there is no margin of error.

I'd measure chamber again and compare to loads and then run a few through the press again at about 25 thou off and see how they shoot.
 
It's also worth mentioning that every single round that goes out into the bush with me has been run through the action. Any that are a tight fit, or imperfect in some other way, are set aside for practice.

Reliability trumps all. I would rather have a 2 MOA rifle that is 100 % reliable and never shifts point of impact, than a 1/4 moa that can only be trusted when the weather is perfect, the phase of the moon is right, and if you hold it with 3 ft-lbs of pressure against your shoulder.
 
It's also worth mentioning that every single round that goes out into the bush with me has been run through the action. Any that are a tight fit, or imperfect in some other way, are set aside for practice.

Some good advice there and a lesson I learned the hard way. I once had 50% of the factory loads that I took on an overseas hunt for my 270WSM that wouldn't chamber. Needless to say I always check now.
 
I think I'll be doing a bit of a crimp from now on. I was under the impression you only crimped match/target bullets.

Actually target loads are not generally crimped. If you have adequate neck tension, and don't seat the bullets, so they jam hard into the lands, crimping isn't necessary for hunting loads for bolt actions either.
 
It's also worth mentioning that every single round that goes out into the bush with me has been run through the action. Any that are a tight fit, or imperfect in some other way, are set aside for practice.

Me too. I'll also add that ammo going on expensive hunts is going to be put up in once fired or new brass.
 
I wonder if there's two dead deer there? Its a bit of a stretch, but 40 yards, doe that turned into a buck and the second shot perfect? I had that happen on yotes more than once and know a guy who did it with matching calf moose. One of my dad's long dead hunting partners popped two cows unknowingly, though it was legal enough in the old party tag days.
 
No two dead deer there. I thought it was a doe as it was antlerless. Obviously it was a bad shot; the first one. Recalling that there was a tree in front of it and so possible that I missed by a bit causing the tree to deflect the bullet enough.

I'm loaded too close to the lands. From now on, every round I take to hunt will be chambered at the range.
 
You ignored previous advise about distance to lands for hunting rounds - now you know that 15 thou nominal is too little. You ignored previous advise about the relative merits of removable magazines and iron sights, now you know. The internet can only do so much for you - real experience is king.
 
You ignored previous advise about distance to lands for hunting rounds - now you know that 15 thou nominal is too little. You ignored previous advise about the relative merits of removable magazines and iron sights, now you know. The internet can only do so much for you - real experience is king.

Not quite sure what is going on with search with my phone but I'm guessing you mean you've suggested to me sometime in the past that hunting rounds should be seated deeper?? Quite possible that I've missed this or forgotten since you posted.

Yes I have ignored the relative merits of iron sights and detachable mags as have about 1/2 the shooters out there. Having been out here in the bush I see now that crap happens and it would be nice to have iron sights with a QD scope incase anything that
happens on that front. Although you could also carry a second rifle with you if the weight isn't an issue I imagine.

Like everything else that I've done you only figure out what you like, prefer after trying. I'm not convinced I will run out out and sell my lovely Winchester and get a rifle with a detachable magazine. Maybe, maybe not. This one has sentimental value now and it is a damn fine rifle to pass down to one of the boys.
 
My hunting loads using cup and core bullets are often loaded .010" off of the lands with no issues at all. I think that you need to either look at how you are measuring the distance to the lands, or you have a significant issue with the consistency of your bullet seating.
 
Back
Top Bottom