- Thread Starter
- #1,981
The only part of the bolt carrier group interacting with the cartridge during firing is the bolt itself, so I wouldn't think so.Might the aluminum be less rigid/ more malleable and flex more, allowing the brass to expand more?
My guess is the larger diameter cases have more surface area to stick against the chamber walls and/or their larger diameter bases increasing the force back against the bolt and forward against the chamber shoulder, resulting in the case itself locking the bolt lugs more tightly against lugs on the barrel extension, and those frictional forces increasing the force required to get the bolt to turn and unlock.
In a gas system, the gasses first hold the bolt as far forward as possible as the bolt carrier starts its rearward movement. That might reduce the friction between the bolt lugs and the extension during extraction, but those bigger cases are harder on extractors in gassers as well, so I imagine there's still more of those frictional forces being overcome with a gasser.