Good Morning All,
I recently purchased a Cooper 92 chambered in .280 AI. Round count per the original owner is 15-20, all Hornady factory ammo with no issues. I bought 100 rounds of Peterson .280 AI brass to do load development with. Prior to doing any loading, I decided to cycle a piece of bare brass through the rifle to verify function. To my surprise, the case would not extract when chambered. It was not stuck and slid back out of the chamber with no resistance when I held the rifle vertically. I removed the bolt and verified that the extractor claw was intact and that the brass would fit appropriately in the bolt face. I tried a second piece of brass, which did extract once but then failed on subsequent attempts. Is this a headspace issue? Should I load a round and see if it will fire form and then subsequently extract? Should I try different brass or factory ammo? This is obviously frustrating, given that I spent quite a bit of money on a nice rifle and premium components. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Regards,
Keenan
I recently purchased a Cooper 92 chambered in .280 AI. Round count per the original owner is 15-20, all Hornady factory ammo with no issues. I bought 100 rounds of Peterson .280 AI brass to do load development with. Prior to doing any loading, I decided to cycle a piece of bare brass through the rifle to verify function. To my surprise, the case would not extract when chambered. It was not stuck and slid back out of the chamber with no resistance when I held the rifle vertically. I removed the bolt and verified that the extractor claw was intact and that the brass would fit appropriately in the bolt face. I tried a second piece of brass, which did extract once but then failed on subsequent attempts. Is this a headspace issue? Should I load a round and see if it will fire form and then subsequently extract? Should I try different brass or factory ammo? This is obviously frustrating, given that I spent quite a bit of money on a nice rifle and premium components. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Regards,
Keenan