Ok here's what i found out this afternoon, I'm an idiot but a live one
I pulled all remaining reloads from this batch (approx. 20)
Powder looked like powder in 1lb bottle (not powdered or anything)
Case length were all between 1.88" & 1.91" ( in spec.)
All cases had 34.6gn of Varget except 5had 35gn, 3 had 36gn & 1 had 37gn
I went
Ok here's what i found out this afternoon, I'm an idiot but a live one
I pulled all remaining reloads from this batch (approx. 20)
Powder looked like powder in 1lb bottle (not powdered or anything)
Case length were all between 1.88" & 1.91" ( in spec.)
All cases had 34.6gn of Varget except 5had 35gn, 3 had 36gn & 1 had 37gn
I went back to Hornady Load Book and 34.6gn is absolute Max for 55Gn V-Max bullet
The loads I've been making are for 50Gn V-Max bullet. (which I used previously)
Max amount of Varget I could get in a 22-250 case is 39gn
Looks like I've been living on the edge for quite a while.
When loading with extruded powders, I weigh EVERY charge from the powder measure. When I use ball powder, I do throw charges, weighing every 5th or so. If you have been throwing extruded charges over the years for that rifle, it could have been subjected to numerous over pressure loads, weakening the action and contributing to the catastrophic failure. Glad you weren't injured, and hopefully we can all be reminded to be super focused when handloading. I have blown a primer or two myself over the years, (once with Varget in a .243 Win. at a below max load, weighed charge. It is not my favorite powder) and even lost the extractor once on a Savage .223 bolt action. My best guess on that one was a slightly oversized Remington bulk bullet, hot load in a hot rifle on a hot day.