RAGGED EDGE
Well-Known Member
If somebody did a primer test in a 300 Win Mag. using a rod in the bore, and measuring the amount of travel, I'd personally put this issue to bed for good.
This depends on chamber dimensions.Powder column comes too play? Shape charge! How is that shape charge going off.....slow or fast and how it's stacked. .378, .420, .473, .535. or .590 bolt face cases with different tapers, oal and bore.
A lot of this depends on temperature. I've had delayed ignition a few times with certain powders. Magpro for instance got tossed on the lawn for me years ago. I'll continue to use magnum primers in anything over 60 grains or so and when loading harder to ignite powder. I sometimes hunt in below zero conditions. I'm not trusting a CCi 200 to light 110 grains of wc872 or h50bmg out of a rum in sub zero conditions. The load is getting a 215 or wlrm. period. I've run pressure trace on a couple of barrels and the magnum primers didn't hurt either.This depends on chamber dimensions.
My cartridge in question has a longer neck and .005" taper per inch. It mirrors an AI with slightly less body taper, typical AI designs have .010" taper per inch.
Seeing as though my chamber holds the flame front inside the case longer, it is very efficient and produces high velocities at lower pressures than my previous attempt that had more taper per inch and the shoulder was back a bit more.
A magnum primer just isn't necessary even with 121gr of ball powder.
I have pressure testing equipment, so I am not guessing here, start pressure is high, which gives gentler rise to max pressure and a hot primer changes this fact too much. Without testing this, you just would never know.
Have said this before, a magnum primer is NOT necessary to ignite large amounts of powder….it was designed and asked for by Roy Weatherby to dampen the hangfires he was getting when designing and playing with REDUCED loads in the 378 Weatherby.
Cheers.
There are a lot of variables to consider before you can say which one is best load volume being the biggest one burn rate is another that being said federal seems to work very well in most of my load. Regular for 60 grains and less and magnum for greater than 60 grains generally speakingIs there one brand of primer superior to others?
This needs to be broadened and updated, but I can't think of a worse time than the present for such an undertaking.Some academics did a primer test some time ago using high-speed pressure transducers.
Of those tested, shows Fed 215's had strongest blast pressure, CCI 200 the least. Pressures were measured in kilo Pascals (kP's). Small primers were also tested. Pressure data, as shown on graphs, have similar shapes indicating impulse proportional to peak pressure(s).
I happened upon a brick of Fed 215's at Scheels months ago for less than $90 & have been using the 215's with ball powders from .22-.250 up.
Rem 7 1/2's, SRP's, reliably set off 40 grain plus charges of ball powder like StaBall in 6.5 CM. I just bought a brick of 7 1/2's for $77.
If a robin, that was hunting worms on some lawn, ingested gun powder would the robin suffer cardiac arrest (heart attack)?
Thanks, Got it downloaded. Printed it and highlighting areas now. Interesting. You hae to test different primes to see what you got. Seem to me I heard this before.This needs to be broadened and updated, but I can't think of a worse time than the present for such an undertaking.
Had similar issue with my bolt guns. Changed to a stronger spring. I use 34 and 41 all the time too.Yeah, I was kinda thinking the same thing, I use #41 & #34 all the time. I did have a problem once with the #34s in a Rem 700 in .308 Win not wanting to fire consistently due to the heavy cup, they'd all go off on the strike, so I stopped using them in bolt guns and kept the #34s to my semi-auto's. As for the #41 and my bolt rifles, I've never had the same problem with them in a bolt rifle. As for the Rem 700, there could have been a few other things contributing to it as well, I just stopped using them because it was easier that way. Cheers.
This test was done as part of a research project done by cadets at the AF Academy. It was peer reviewed and reviewed by industry professionals.This needs to be broadened and updated, but I can't think of a worse time than the present for such an undertaking.
there's enough Malathion on my lawn to control skeeters that I doubt a bird could find a worm on my front lawn...If a robin, that was hunting worms on some lawn, ingested gun powder would the robin suffer cardiac arrest (heart attack)?
I also run a Pressure Trace II, however I use raw data achieved to map what pressure I run.A lot of this depends on temperature. I've had delayed ignition a few times with certain powders. Magpro for instance got tossed on the lawn for me years ago. I'll continue to use magnum primers in anything over 60 grains or so and when loading harder to ignite powder. I sometimes hunt in below zero conditions. I'm not trusting a CCi 200 to light 110 grains of wc872 or h50bmg out of a rum in sub zero conditions. The load is getting a 215 or wlrm. period. I've run pressure trace on a couple of barrels and the magnum primers didn't hurt either.