What did I do? Case body bulge

Joined
May 26, 2016
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Location
California
Reloaded some 3006 and when shooting a handful wouldn’t feed. Upon inspection those that failed to feed all had some degree of bulge in the side of the case. Reloaded some different headstamps during this session but only the barns brass had the issue. All brass was once fired through the same rifle.
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A382DWDZQ

WKR
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Dec 3, 2021
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757
Check the thickness of the neck wall also. Could be that it’s thicker than the others and so neck tension is a bit stiffer. Seating might be putting too much pressure.t
 

ItsPaste

FNG
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Oct 4, 2024
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Check the thickness of the neck wall also. Could be that it’s thicker than the others and so neck tension is a bit stiffer. Seating might be putting too much pressure.t
I definitely second this. I've added an extra step to my reloading process for normalizing neck tension of my cases and it's done wonders for standard deviation. You may have come across some super tight cases.
 

SloppyJ

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Feb 24, 2023
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I definitely second this. I've added an extra step to my reloading process for normalizing neck tension of my cases and it's done wonders for standard deviation. You may have come across some super tight cases.

What's your process that you implemented?
 
Joined
Mar 27, 2019
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Lyon County, NV
I now use an expander mandrel. An extra step in the process, but has produced measurable results.

I'm only minimally experienced in handloading rifle ammo, but I want to make sure I understand this - using an expander mandrel makes neck inner-diameter uniform, and thereby makes neck tension uniform once you seat the bullet?

How does that work if you're dealing with differences in neck-wall thicknesses? Even if the neck's inner-diameter were uniformed with the expander, wouldn't a thicker neck wall still end up being compressed back into a narrower neck ID when seating the bullet?
 

Taudisio

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I'm only minimally experienced in handloading rifle ammo, but I want to make sure I understand this - using an expander mandrel makes neck inner-diameter uniform, and thereby makes neck tension uniform once you seat the bullet?

How does that work if you're dealing with differences in neck-wall thicknesses? Even if the neck's inner-diameter were uniformed with the expander, wouldn't a thicker neck wall still end up being compressed back into a narrower neck ID when seating the bullet?
Potentially. In my experience, neck sizing with a die makes it smaller than necessary, and you have spring back after you pull your the expander ball through it. You still have spring back when using an expander mandrel, but that can vary with the length of time you keep the mandrel inside (dwell time). I too have found the expander mandrels to be much more consistent when I am seating bullets.

OP, if you answer the questions asked above, it can help narrow down what the issue might be.
 
OP
K
Joined
May 26, 2016
Messages
24
Location
California
Are your loads compressed? Too much powder compression will cause bulges like that.
loads were not compressed and under max charge, no signed of pressure in other loads that were fired.

Are you running a full length resizing die, or are these fire formed?
Brass was once fired through the same rifle. Full length sizing die was used to bump shoulder back 2 thou.

Check the thickness of the neck wall also. Could be that it’s thicker than the others and so neck tension is a bit stiffer. Seating might be putting too much pressure.t
I have not checked neck thickness. will check once hunts are done and im back in the reloading room.
 

Wrench

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Screw your die body up 1/2 turn and bring your stem back down. I think you may be into the crimp on your seater.
 

SloppyJ

WKR
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Feb 24, 2023
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I now use an expander mandrel. An extra step in the process, but has produced measurable results.

Been thinking about adding one in. Do you use bushing dies? If so, did you adjust your bushings a bit smaller? I assume it's the last step before a chamfer and deburr?

One last thing, how does it differ between using a FL bushing die pulling the expander through?
 

Taudisio

WKR
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Jan 20, 2023
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Screw your die body up 1/2 turn and bring your stem back down. I think you may be into the crimp on your seater.
This is exactly what I was thinking. I have folded a 300wsm and 30 nosler at the shoulder doing this. I haven’t reloaded the ‘06, but seems most reasonable.
 
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