Come on, OP, look harder for that rifle cartridge case!
And if you find the case the primer will be seated in it. You are all aware that I firmly believe the primer did not fire, but even if it did, it would still be seated in the case, because there is no reason, whatsoever, that if it fired it would be blown out of the case.
I believe most people think there is actually more power in a primer than there actually is. We constantly hear of a cartridge loaded with no powder and the primer drove the bullet to some point down the barrel. One day when I had nothing better to do I figured out that I would use different primers and see the difference in the power of the primer, by the distance the bullet was driven down the barrel. So I loaded a 45-70 case with a primer but no powder and seated a 405 grain cast bullet. I loaded three like this, using a large pistol primer in one, a standard prime in another and a magnum primer in the third. None of the bullets in the test were crimped.
I pulled the trigger on the pistol primer, very clearly heard the firing pin strike, but no other sound, whatsoever. The cartridge came out of the chamber just as it had gone in. Bullet never moved. I then tried the standard primer with the exact same results. Pulled the trigger on the magnum primer, heard the firing pin hit but no other sound. None of the bullets had moved. I pulled the bullets and the cases were loaded with soot, indicating each primer had duly fired, but nothing happened.
I then repeated the test, using a 30-06 and 180 grain bullets. Results were exactly the same, no bullet had moved, not even the slightest, but each primer had fired and spread its soot in the case.
Next I went to the 243 and loaded the three different primers with a bullet but no powder. I should have been using new cases, instead I was just using my used cases, so of course some may have gripped the bullet tighter than others.
With the 243 neither the pistol primer nor the standard primer moved a bullet. When I shot the magnum primer I heard the noise and a sooted up empty came out of the chamber. I pushed a dowel down the barrel, just touched the bullet and it fell out of the chamber with marks on it just at the ogive.
I am not the slightest interested in someone saying what military primers do, or don't do. I was testing the ordinary components that hand loaders use and the results, while at complete odds to what we usually read, are never the less quite enlightening.
And if you find the case the primer will be seated in it. You are all aware that I firmly believe the primer did not fire, but even if it did, it would still be seated in the case, because there is no reason, whatsoever, that if it fired it would be blown out of the case.
I believe most people think there is actually more power in a primer than there actually is. We constantly hear of a cartridge loaded with no powder and the primer drove the bullet to some point down the barrel. One day when I had nothing better to do I figured out that I would use different primers and see the difference in the power of the primer, by the distance the bullet was driven down the barrel. So I loaded a 45-70 case with a primer but no powder and seated a 405 grain cast bullet. I loaded three like this, using a large pistol primer in one, a standard prime in another and a magnum primer in the third. None of the bullets in the test were crimped.
I pulled the trigger on the pistol primer, very clearly heard the firing pin strike, but no other sound, whatsoever. The cartridge came out of the chamber just as it had gone in. Bullet never moved. I then tried the standard primer with the exact same results. Pulled the trigger on the magnum primer, heard the firing pin hit but no other sound. None of the bullets had moved. I pulled the bullets and the cases were loaded with soot, indicating each primer had duly fired, but nothing happened.
I then repeated the test, using a 30-06 and 180 grain bullets. Results were exactly the same, no bullet had moved, not even the slightest, but each primer had fired and spread its soot in the case.
Next I went to the 243 and loaded the three different primers with a bullet but no powder. I should have been using new cases, instead I was just using my used cases, so of course some may have gripped the bullet tighter than others.
With the 243 neither the pistol primer nor the standard primer moved a bullet. When I shot the magnum primer I heard the noise and a sooted up empty came out of the chamber. I pushed a dowel down the barrel, just touched the bullet and it fell out of the chamber with marks on it just at the ogive.
I am not the slightest interested in someone saying what military primers do, or don't do. I was testing the ordinary components that hand loaders use and the results, while at complete odds to what we usually read, are never the less quite enlightening.
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