Primer issues

Antonio m

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
224
Hi,I am hoping to find information regarding firing pin strikes/ primer variables etc.
I sometimes see cratering on 270 win cartridge cases for no reason,the firing pin does leaves a shallower and smaller diameter strike on most primers than other rifles I have. It doesn't misfire but will crater on less than full power loads(sometimes).No extractor marks or tough ejection . Loads are chrono'd to confirm this.It is more prevalent with neck sized brass...but not always. Primers are not /unsafely flattened . This rifle is a newer BLR and I wonder if it.has something to do with the rebounding hammer? Anyways, I also wonder if an oversized flash hole or any primer make is more prone to this? I have tried several and magnum primers but don't see a definite pattern. Thanks for any insights...Tony
 
Hi,I am hoping to find information regarding firing pin strikes/ primer variables etc.
I sometimes see cratering on 270 win cartridge cases for no reason,the firing pin does leaves a shallower and smaller diameter strike on most primers than other rifles I have. It doesn't misfire but will crater on less than full power loads(sometimes).No extractor marks or tough ejection . Loads are chrono'd to confirm this.It is more prevalent with neck sized brass...but not always. Primers are not /unsafely flattened . This rifle is a newer BLR and I wonder if it.has something to do with the rebounding hammer? Anyways, I also wonder if an oversized flash hole or any primer make is more prone to this? I have tried several and magnum primers but don't see a definite pattern. Thanks for any insights...Tony

This is typical of rebounding firing pins - with a bolt gun, you have a heavy spring holding the pin in place against the primer so it can't push back until the pressures gets really high to overcome both the metal resistance, AND the spring - with a hammer (rebounding or not) there is no support to the indention so it can be pushed back at lower pressure.
 
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