Lol I found some wronguns the other day...didn't even know there was Berdan primed small rifle but found half dozen 5.56,luckily I realised something wrong when ram stopped so had a look. Sorted 300 cases via head stamp after that lol
Lol I found some wronguns the other day...didn't even know there was Berdan primed small rifle but found half dozen 5.56,luckily I realised something wrong when ram stopped so had a look. Sorted 300 cases via head stamp after that lol
75/15/10 black powder matters
I learnt new trick the other day.with care I can get Lyman case deburring tool to clamp in chuck of cordless drill. Looks like a rocket ship.holding carefully while closing chuck,the jaws come out and grip shaft. Too easy and quick to whizz up primer pockets then.
75/15/10 black powder matters
What upsets me most about all this, is that he threw the powder away. Why did he throw the powder away? Not only do I reuse the powder from dismantled cartridges, I reuse the primers too. And the bullets and cases.
Those ones that didn't go off look almost cupped from the firing pin strike to me - I would suggest that the issue may be related to what is for some reason known as primer sensitising during the primer seating operation or in other words they haven't been squeezed in hard enough to get the cup fully seated onto the anvil.
It's a fairly critical part of the operation, and doesn't take much of an error here to upset things enough that they don't play. What do you use to seat them?
Lol. For decrimping I use a Stanley knife. Does the job.
Hunt safe, look after the bush & plug more pests. The greatest invention in the history of man is beer.
https://youtu.be/2v3QrUvYj-Y
A bit more bang is better.
My model 7 .223 use to do this couldnt hit CCI hard enough but cratered on the fed 210s I put it to light strike
Can’t be arsed going back and reading the whole thread but I don’t think anyone has said try the rounds in another rifle if possible, removes one variable possibly.
Ive loaded white river primers in my 303, k98 mauser, mosin nagant, k31 swiss and not had a single misfire over about 150 rounds ive loaded with them so far. Would be good to find a mate with the same calibre and try firing them in that. Bit late now obviously. They had a few problems lately at the local shotgun range with seeing more misfires than usual. Someone there reckoned the primer quality has gone down since the war in ukraine etc?
I heard of the shotgun issue two years ago haven't struck it yet myself.
75/15/10 black powder matters
Ahh - I found my priming improved a LOT with going to a hand primer, could feel and judge when the primer cup was properly seated. For some reason I was getting the odd proud and tall one out of the press priming lever and was having to stick them back in for another go or two. Worth a double look after each priming operation and check they are all fully seated and seated to the same depth...
Update
Cleaned the bolt - looked good, no fouling/grease and spring strong. It’s not the issue.
Purchased a Lyman Hand primer - it was utterly useless only seating about 70% with the WREs so went back to cheap Lee tool as part of the anniversary kit I use which was better. But had to really apply some pressure to finish the seating.
Loaded up 30 odd 22-250 rounds with WREs and had to really push/slam to get primers all seated in the PPU cases (once fired) but they all worked in the Tikka apart from one I had crushed putting in and could see a crease in the primer.
Went to old quarry/range with the 284 to check zero.. The normal 162s with feds worked fine. The 3 old 140s with WREs didn’t ignite. Pulled all the 140s (and kept powder!) and put all the empty but still WRE primed cases through the 284 with earmuffs on and safe area and about 12 out of 20 went pop with a nice flame. The primers are not defective - just big!
Loaded up another 10 odd 162s with Fed210s for my next hunt and the Feds seated like butter and much deeper than the WREs.
In conclusion - it’s the proper seating that is my problem with WREs and my WIN284 cases. A number of people identified this above. I’ve managed to get another 200 Fed210s and I stick to my 162 load for now.
Thanks for all the advice and help - I’ve learned a bit again. I do need a better priming tool and the Lyman isn’t it….
2C. Some times you need to fully uniform the primer pocket to seat the primer. Those last primers looked "squashed". Then last quality control flick dry thumb over the primer. You can feel it seated below the lip. Then eyeometry to check it looks like it feels. The WRE are "higher" but they are a good primer. Compensate by uniforming the pocket thoroughly.
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