I had a little unintended dry fire practice during this rifle elk season.
I shot a bull and he was still moving so I ran the bolt and attempted to shoot again - "click" - the round did not go off. I quickly ran the bolt again but he went down before I attempted another shot.
I picked up the round that failed to fire and it had an extremely light primer strike. Barely noticeable. The case from the fired round had a full heavy primer strike.
Weather was dry and 60f.
The rifle is a .300WM Tikka T3 ~5 years old, ~150 rounds through it, clean and good condition. I pulled the bolt apart and it is clean and dry with no debris. Ammunition was Federal Premium 180gr Nosler Partition. The ammo is about 15 years old and I might have used fresh ammo instead if not for the current shortage. I had fired 16 rounds from this particular box without issue.
I am going to try to fire that light strike round again and see what happens. If it doesn't fire it's got to be a bad round. If it fires then I am going to be really scratching my head.
What do you think?
I shot a bull and he was still moving so I ran the bolt and attempted to shoot again - "click" - the round did not go off. I quickly ran the bolt again but he went down before I attempted another shot.
I picked up the round that failed to fire and it had an extremely light primer strike. Barely noticeable. The case from the fired round had a full heavy primer strike.
Weather was dry and 60f.
The rifle is a .300WM Tikka T3 ~5 years old, ~150 rounds through it, clean and good condition. I pulled the bolt apart and it is clean and dry with no debris. Ammunition was Federal Premium 180gr Nosler Partition. The ammo is about 15 years old and I might have used fresh ammo instead if not for the current shortage. I had fired 16 rounds from this particular box without issue.
I am going to try to fire that light strike round again and see what happens. If it doesn't fire it's got to be a bad round. If it fires then I am going to be really scratching my head.
What do you think?