Reloaded ammo wouldn’t fire

Other than agreeing that pierced primers are definitely time to stop, have you ever measured the firing pin protrusion? Or maybe checked the diameter of your firing pin compared to the hole in the bolt for the firing pin? Something seems amiss.
 
I've done exactly what OP describes before. It only takes one pierced or blown primer to gum up an AR and once it happens you might as well yank the bolt group out and disassemble it and clean it. Maybe you'll notice the scrap of brass jammed in there, maybe it'll fall out unnoticed, but the rifle won't be reliable again, if it even fires at all, until you remove it.
 
Like I said, it was factory AAC loads. I wasn't reloading at the time.
A friend had same issue and both of us split cases
 
I had a batch of Ammo Inc 223 that was all sorts of screwy, with the powder and primers so messed up that it had 2 of my ARs slam-firing. That's the only factory ammo I've ever had with pierced primers, but it gave a couple of 2 and 3-round full-auto bursts. Best I could tell, the powder was peaking the pressure way too high, way too close to the gas port - that flung the BCG back way too fast, and on the forward stroke the floating firing pin punched right through the primer. In 2 cases, the anvil of the primer flowed right into the bolt's firing-pin hole, keeping the casing from ejecting. At least part of the problem, I suspect, came from not using the thicker cups of magnum or AR-rated primers.
Now that I read this, what I experienced that I commented above was almost to a T.

I had just put an aftermarket trigger in this AR and I blamed me not being used to the take-up and reset, but it was 100% shooting 2 round bursts every few shots.

Perhaps that is the cause for my pierced primers.
 
Now that I read this, what I experienced that I commented above was almost to a T.

I had just put an aftermarket trigger in this AR and I blamed me not being used to the take-up and reset, but it was 100% shooting 2 round bursts every few shots.

Perhaps that is the cause for my pierced primers.

Interesting. My first thought was that I had screwed up the gun somehow, that it was severely overgassed or something, combined with a lightweight BCG, in a somewhat new build. The second AR is boring reliable, with a full-mass BCG and a heavy buffer/recoil spring setup. If I hadn't had the second, proven AR to check against, I could have found myself chasing my tail on the lightweight build.
 
Interesting. My first thought was that I had screwed up the gun somehow, that it was severely overgassed or something, combined with a lightweight BCG, in a somewhat new build. The second AR is boring reliable, with a full-mass BCG and a heavy buffer/recoil spring setup. If I hadn't had the second, proven AR to check against, I could have found myself chasing my tail on the lightweight build.
I was shooting suppressed with a can that typically is flow-through enough to not have crazy gas issues (with a 223). It was pre adjustable gas block when I first started messing with the upper.

I decided after the weirdness that took place that I didn’t want to mess with a suppressed gas 6arc and opted for a bolt action upper with no gas instead.

I bet the bolt moving at Mach Jesus was 99% of my problem. I wasn’t married to it enough to figure it out.
 
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