Balloon head cases

Jeff423

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I was reloading S&W .32 Long last night when my 650 jammed. It was because the depriming pin wouldn't fit through the primer hole in the case. I had never seen a balloon head case before so it took me a little while to figure out the problem. I guess the cases must have come from some used brass I bought years ago.
I got them deprimed with my Lee universal deprimer and loaded them manually. I then realized that was a mistake because I'll have the same problem next time.
Questions:
When did they stop making these? They are Remington Peters.
Does anybody want them? If so, I'll be happy to mail them to a forum member. Otherwise they are going in my brass scrap bin.
 
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Ended up with several balloon head .45 Colt cases a while back in a purchase of "once-fired range brass." Same problem you had; they don't reload all that well using the same procedures as for "modern" brass. Every one of the balloon heads made its presence known during decapping.

Mine are also Remington headstamp and they gotta be on the old side of ammo manufacturing history.

I only ended up with a few and kept them as collector's items. Hope you find a home for your .32 collectors items.

Bryan
 
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Someone gave me 400 Rem-UMC 44 special cases. I loaded 'em up and they loaded fine. I subsequently realized they were ballon head cases. They were loaded fairly lightly. I am still using them...at least for my fun loads. Just can't dump good 44 sp cases. Never saw a balloon head 32L
 
Much confusion about balloon head cases. Many handloaders confuse cases that have a recessed ring around the primer hole with real balloon head cases. They are not balloon head cases. Actual balloon head cases have a rim that is thin folded sheet brass rather than a solid rim. A pic of anyone's supposed balloon cases will clear this issue up quickly.
 
I would be exceedingly surprised to see a R-P headstamped case, as you said, on anything that could be described as having a "balloon head". R-P headstamps did not appear until the early 1960s. Prior to that, the HS would be REM-UMC, back to around 1911. Earlier Peters HSs were just PETERS.
 
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I find it unlikely you have a real balloon head case. More likely one with a smaller than normal primer hole. Balloon head cases were made maybe until 1890 - not a common thing nowdays. Post a picture.
 
Could be undersized flash holes, but I don't know why any modern case would have that condition. A cure would be to de-prime them manually and use a small drill bit to enlarge the flash holes enough so a depriming pin will slide through.
 
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The UMC is balloon head, the Starline brass is modern.

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The 44 sp I have are actually the type 4 in the pics above. I do have some true balloon head 45 Colt ammo and cases. II still don't load those type 4s very heavy as the case walls really seem to be thin...I also shoot them in a Ruger 44 Sp Blackhawk.. nice gun too.
 
I've run across several cartridges with the semi-balloon head: 45 colt, 38-40, 50-70. All were UMC and I never had any issues de-priming them. I use light loads in all of them and they've given me no real trouble. I did find it necessary to anneal them as they were brittle with age and either were prone to splitting at the neck or would not hold a crimp. Have never run across any of the type 3, folded head cases.

John
 
Everyone's mileage may differ. The .45 Colt cases I mentioned are also marked Peters rather than R-P - apologies. They ARE balloonheads. I posted about them several months ago and got the same reaction as the OP here, with most replies claiming I must be in error. I did the research, as I always try to do, before posting, as someone here always knows more than I do.

Bryan
 
I was pulling bullets on some 22 jet reloads and depriming the cases so I can sell the empties. i found about 20 that my Lee decapping pin would not easily pass thru. I did a bump, bump with the handle and forced them thru. i assume they are larger flash holes now
 
I've reloaded a lot of the old semi-balloon head cases without much in the way of issues. I have found that a lot of older brass, including solid head ones, seems to have a smaller flash hole than newer stuff. Have had decapping pins stick in more than a few older cases. A bit of a pain but nothing I can't deal with, can always open the flash hole up a little if need be.

As to the really old, folded balloon head cases, in my experiments with seeing if very old ammo would fire, I've only run across a few that were that type. Really only noticed when cleaning and examining them and comparing them to other cases.
 
Could be undersized flash holes, but I don't know why any modern case would have that condition. A cure would be to de-prime them manually and use a small drill bit to enlarge the flash holes enough so a depriming pin will slide through.
Thanks for that suggestion, I'm sure that process would work. I have enough brass and few enough of these that I don't need to go that far.
 
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