In the depths of the shed I found a box of .44 mag brass, just over a couple of thousand from the pistol days. Getting low on loaded stuff so had the tumbler going for a couple of days and have just finished loading a thousand.
There was all sorts on there. Mixing brass in pistol calbers has never bothered me and I have never found a difference at the ranges I shoot the .44, but we had Howitzer, Winchester, Norma, Remington and even some H&F! And some Sako.
Anyhow, I'm loading it on my Dillon as I have done for 27 years. And, using the same Lee dies that have loaded for two revolvers and three rifles chambered in .44. Now here's the thing, the Sako brass would go through a full length resize, and then "spring back" to it's unsized size!!
Everyone of them would let a .429 bullet slide into the mouth and hit the bottom of the case with ease. Run them through the FL die and the bullet again would just slide in. No matter how many times it was run through the die. There were no problems with any other cases, just the Sako. I sifted what I thought was all of them but still missed a couple, well eight actually, and when running a progressive I only found this out after it had "cost" me a primer.
Any ideas why this would happen?
The strangest of things with Sako brass
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All handloading data posted on Full-Bore UK from 23/2/2021 must reference the published pressure tested data it was sourced from, posts without such verification will be removed.
Any existing data without such a reference should be treated as suspect and not used.
Use reloading information posted here at your own risk. This forum (http://www.full-bore.co.uk) is not responsible for any property damage or personal injury as a consequence of using reloading data posted here, the information is individual members findings and observations only. Always verify the load data and be absolutely sure your firearm can handle the load, especially older ones. If in doubt start low and work your way up.
The strangest of things with Sako brass
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
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Re: The strangest of things with Sako brass
Need annealing?
Brass thickness/thinness?
Faeries?
Brass thickness/thinness?
Faeries?
Come on Bambi get some
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Re: The strangest of things with Sako brass
I would say the brass was thinner.
I had this with some .308 Federal once fired I picked up once, I cleaned it, put it through a full length size, trimmed it to length and chamfered the neck and uniformed the primer pockets on 100 cases before priming 100 of them only to find the bullets could be seated with finger pressure.
I had this with some .308 Federal once fired I picked up once, I cleaned it, put it through a full length size, trimmed it to length and chamfered the neck and uniformed the primer pockets on 100 cases before priming 100 of them only to find the bullets could be seated with finger pressure.
Re: The strangest of things with Sako brass
Picked up from another website is the suggestion that the cases need annealing because they have become work hardened or weren't sufficiently annealed in the first place. The result is that they spring back to the unsized dimensions immediately on removal from the sizing die rather than remaining at the the resized dimensions.
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