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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Reloading
Misfires
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<blockquote data-quote="nso123" data-source="post: 5432984" data-attributes="member: 2508"><p>I can't see neck tension having anything to do with the primer not going off. Did the ones that didn't fire have an obvious solid primer strike? Since the brass is converted, I would probably measure the shoulder with a comparator on both a piece of the fired brass and one of your unfired rounds. As for the rounds not going off, I'd be cautious and make sure the shoulder is not well short of a factory 25-06 round. If it's short enough, it could be moving forward when the firing pin hits it, which would possibly not let the round fire. There is also a chance that the shoulder deformed a bit when you converted the brass, which could make it feel like a long round when you chamber it. Obviously you know that at least one round was seated long. It's an interesting problem for sure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nso123, post: 5432984, member: 2508"] I can’t see neck tension having anything to do with the primer not going off. Did the ones that didn’t fire have an obvious solid primer strike? Since the brass is converted, I would probably measure the shoulder with a comparator on both a piece of the fired brass and one of your unfired rounds. As for the rounds not going off, I’d be cautious and make sure the shoulder is not well short of a factory 25-06 round. If it’s short enough, it could be moving forward when the firing pin hits it, which would possibly not let the round fire. There is also a chance that the shoulder deformed a bit when you converted the brass, which could make it feel like a long round when you chamber it. Obviously you know that at least one round was seated long. It’s an interesting problem for sure. [/QUOTE]
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