Hello!
I had a new experience yesterday while testing heavy 357 Mag loads. Load was 13,8 grains H110, 180 grain Nosler Partition bullets, Rem Ni-plated 357 brass, Federal SMP, muzzle velocities avg 1200 fps, gun is a Ruger Blackhawk, 6,5 inch barrel. Chamber pressures near max for 357 Mag. On very first shot sound was "hollow" and velocity was 1085 fps, recoil was lighter than usual and bullet hit target lower than other two shots. Later I had another such "hollow" sounding shot, again low velocity and low POI. When I removed empty brass from cylinder, two had sidewall splits, one about one cm long, other almost full length of case (this one took some effort to extract). Other 4 cases extracted easy and dropped back into chambers under their own weight. No damage to chambers seen visually. All primers visually identical and same visually as for slightly lighter loadings. This was 2nd loading of these cases, which had been full-length resized each loading. Next time I will check cases immediately after such an event.
Anyone else experienced this combination of "hollow" sound of shot, major sidewall splits and sharply lower velocities? Although these two events indicate no safety problem, they are negative indicators of reliability of these cases for hunting loads, because of their lower velocities and POIs.
I seldom use Ni-plated brass. In this case I have about 20 once-fired Remington and S&W Ni-plated 357 Mag cases, which I chose to use for these loads so that they can be readily distinguished from my other loads. Previous use of mixed 38 Spl Ni-plated brass for low-pressure HBWC loads resulted in far few loading of Ni-plated vs standard brass cases before sidewalls split.
Thanks,
Niklas
I had a new experience yesterday while testing heavy 357 Mag loads. Load was 13,8 grains H110, 180 grain Nosler Partition bullets, Rem Ni-plated 357 brass, Federal SMP, muzzle velocities avg 1200 fps, gun is a Ruger Blackhawk, 6,5 inch barrel. Chamber pressures near max for 357 Mag. On very first shot sound was "hollow" and velocity was 1085 fps, recoil was lighter than usual and bullet hit target lower than other two shots. Later I had another such "hollow" sounding shot, again low velocity and low POI. When I removed empty brass from cylinder, two had sidewall splits, one about one cm long, other almost full length of case (this one took some effort to extract). Other 4 cases extracted easy and dropped back into chambers under their own weight. No damage to chambers seen visually. All primers visually identical and same visually as for slightly lighter loadings. This was 2nd loading of these cases, which had been full-length resized each loading. Next time I will check cases immediately after such an event.
Anyone else experienced this combination of "hollow" sound of shot, major sidewall splits and sharply lower velocities? Although these two events indicate no safety problem, they are negative indicators of reliability of these cases for hunting loads, because of their lower velocities and POIs.
I seldom use Ni-plated brass. In this case I have about 20 once-fired Remington and S&W Ni-plated 357 Mag cases, which I chose to use for these loads so that they can be readily distinguished from my other loads. Previous use of mixed 38 Spl Ni-plated brass for low-pressure HBWC loads resulted in far few loading of Ni-plated vs standard brass cases before sidewalls split.
Thanks,
Niklas