k0ua
Epic Contributor
You'll have that.![]()
Thread drift like a canoe in the Niagara River.
You'll have that.![]()
Thread drift like a canoe in the Niagara River.
You'll have that.![]()
Primer set back can occur because there is no powder charge to slam the primer back into the breechface. And the primer charge pressure can move the primer back a little unless the flash hole is enlarged a bit (think small drill bit run thru each case) to prevent the primer charge pressure from "setting back " the primer. In a revolver, this setback, if it occurs could "tie up" a revolver and prevent cylinder rotation. Be sure to mark these few cases you prepare this way. A lot of this depends on how tightly the primers seat into the primer seats. I used rubber bullets in a .45 acp autoloader and of course I didn't care about primer setback. But in a revolver, this may need to be done. Mark the case heads with a sharpie and don't mix these cases up with your regular cases with normal primer flashholes. Of course we are assuming you are a reloader to start with. Some may think these bullets are loaded ammunition which of course they are not. They are just rubber bullets to load into cases by reloaders. Of course the rubber buckshot loads I pointed to are complete loaded shells ready to go.
I have shot many of the powder free plastic rounds in my Redhawk wheelgun, not so much as a hiccup
Probably depends a lot on how "loosey goosey" your primer pockets are.
When I was in my mid to late 20’s, my 4 year old daughter was bitten in the face by a GS. I was enraged and promptly loaded my 30-06 . I drove around the neighborhood we were living in never finding it. Thank God I didn’t. Thinking back on it, what kind of idiot touches of an 06 in a neighborhood full of families? Young and dumb. I was one of those guys once.....