My first squib

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Gentlemen,

After almost two decades of casting and reloading my own practice ammo I had my first squib during my last range trip! Dang it! In the back of my mind, I have always considered a squib possible but after many tens of thousands of rounds that went bang, I thought maybe my reloading process was good enough. But obviously I was wrong, and it was my turn. I have read in articles and heard from other reloaders that if you reload or shoot long enough, you'll experience a squib. That bit of information held true for me. And YES, the description of what it sounded like was "Pfuzzz....." and no notable recoil, this was just like it's been described to me before.

I was shooting 158 grain cast LSWC out of my model 60-9. After the "Pfuzz" sound I kept the muzzle down range thinking hang fire. After a few seconds, nothing, so I tried to open the cylinder, nothing, locked up. Knowing I had two live rounds left I put it away until I got back home. Sure enough, when I shined my bore light down the muzzle there it was, a LSWC bullet lodged in the forcing cone with some amount still in the cylinder throat.

I use a pretty heavy roll crimp, and I have experienced a few cartridges over the years when the primer went off but without any powder in them, the bullet didn't break the crimp or broke the crimp and only moved a little bit. So, I have failed to drop power in the past and on a rare occasion have had rounds that go bang with a much greater recoil than expected, too much powder. But I'm guessing this time I made the mistake of having just enough powder in there to launch the bullet into the forcing cone. Dang it!

I'm pleased that it took me this long to experience a squib and thankful it locked up the gun as to prevent another trigger pull!

Anyway, the takeaway, regardless of experience or skill level, that Murphy guy doesn't care!
 
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I had one a few years ago with a 9mm reload. Soooo, I know it was something I caused. Probably a case that got a light powder charge or none at all. Bullet was partially stuck in the barrel so the next round couldn't camber. Lucky me.

I don't use a progressive press and visually check ever case for powder before I seat. It still happened because of my careless inspection. At least that's I'm thinking happened.

Glad there was no damage to you or the firearm.
 
I had one a few years ago with a 9mm reload. Soooo, I know it was something I caused. Probably a case that got a light powder charge or none at all. Bullet was partially stuck in the barrel so the next round couldn't camber. Lucky me.

I don't use a progressive press and visually check ever case for powder before I seat. It still happened because of my careless inspection. At least that's I'm thinking happened.

Glad there was no damage to you or the firearm.
The same with me, I don't use a progressive press either. I have a RCBS Big Max which I don't think has been made in several years. Got it in 1982. I also check each and every casing with a flashlight in my 44's before putting the bullet in. Then I know it's safe to seat.
 
Gentlemen,

After almost two decades of casting and reloading my own practice ammo I had my first squib during my last range trip! Dang it! In the back of my mind, I have always considered a squib possible but after many tens of thousands of rounds that went bang, I thought maybe my reloading process was good enough. But obviously I was wrong, and it was my turn. I have read in articles and heard from other reloaders that if you reload or shoot long enough, you'll experience a squib. That bit of information held true for me. And YES, the description of what it sounded like was "Pfuzzz....." and no notable recoil, this was just like it's been described to me before.

I was shooting 158 grain cast LSWC out of my model 60-9. After the "Pfuzz" sound I kept the muzzle down range thinking hang fire. After a few seconds, nothing, so I tried to open the cylinder, nothing, locked up. Knowing I had two live rounds left I put it away until I got back home. Sure enough, when I shined my bore light down the muzzle there it was, a LSWC bullet lodged in the forcing cone with some amount still in the cylinder throat.

I use a pretty heavy roll crimp, and I have experienced a few cartridges over the years when the primer went off but without any powder in them, the bullet didn't break the crimp or broke the crimp and only moved a little bit. So, I have failed to drop power in the past and on a rare occasion have had rounds that go bang with a much greater recoil than expected, too much powder. But I'm guessing this time I made the mistake of having just enough powder in there to launch the bullet into the forcing cone. Dang it!

I'm pleased that it took me this long to experience a squib and thankful it locked up the gun as to prevent another trigger pull!

Anyway, the takeaway, regardless of experience or skill level, that Murphy guy doesn't care!
Can you explain your reloading process?
 
I think you will find some half burned powder. My opinion, you did nothing wrong, for some reason the primer didn't burn hot enough to properly ignite the powder.
 
Here is the follow up to my first squib. Using a wooden dowel and a plastic hammer I tappy tapped the bullet out of the forcing cone back into the cylinder throat and partially back into the case. Opened the cylinder and started "forensic analysis". From the amount of travel of the wooden dowel I could tell the shoulder of the SWC bullet stopped just inside the forcing cone with most of the main barrel of the bullet stuck in the cylinder throat. When I dumped the fired brass, live rounds, and squib out into my hand I noticed a small amount of unburnt powder, maybe 6-7 tiny flakes. I then pulled the bullet and found a few more tiny flakes of powder inside the case and the base of the bullet was solid black with carbon. The brass looked normal.

My conclusion for the cause of the squib is most likely a very light or just the tiniest bit charge of power. Which knowing my process it was let's say, a self-induced "operator error" squib. Dang it!

Got to pay attention! But pulling the handle, getting in the zone and letting your mind wonder while running a progressive press is some dang gooood therapy for what ails ya! Or it is for me........
 
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Can you explain your reloading process?
My reloading process? Well, my reloading process has been more of an evolution than a process. I started reloading with the ol' "wack a mole" Lee Loader. I produced several thousand very time-consuming quality rounds that way and only set off a dozen or so primers during the process. I was new to reloading so I was hypersensitive to doing it right. I learned much by doing every single step in reloading process manually. Except my wife started missing me and the occasional primer exploding in my hands became annoying. And the worst part is I could not produce rounds as quickly as I could shoot them.

I graduated to a Lee single stage press and powder measure. Boy, my stubborn ass should have gotten a single stage press after about 100 rounds of using the Lee Loader, but hey, nobody ever accused me of being all that bright. Using the single stage press I produced over 15,000 high quality rounds, every one of them went bang and were waaaay more accurate than me. Still, I spent about the same amount of time reloading as shooting and after more than 15k rounds, let's just say the newness and excitement of reloading had worn thin and I had mastered the process. The big takeaway is for me is with handgun ammo you don't need to produce the super high quality ultimate consistent match type ammo for offhand killing of paper or steel targets. You don't notice how accurate your ammo is at twenty-five yards or less or at least I can't.

Next up is my current reloading process using a Dillion 550C progressive press, I have produced somewhere around 50k rounds in the last 8-9 years with the Dillon. Unfortunately, this is the reason I produced a squib load. Let me explain.
I now focus on quantity of rounds over quality of rounds using the progressive press. I produce or purchase the components in large numbers. When I process brass, I do it by the bucket full. I size, de-cap, and then wet tumble. I normally cast projectiles in the cold months producing many thousands of for each caliber I reload. I buy primers by the case and powder in 8 LB jugs. So, most of the time I have enough components of any caliber to feed the dillion and spit out a few thousands rounds in just a few hours on a rainy Saturday. The Dillion stays covered up most of the time.

What caused the squib? Short answer is likely ME. When things are running well and everything is clean and tuned up, just pull the handle and make ammo. Easy peasy, right? Well sometimes things happen, primers stop feeding or go in backwards or maybe a piece brass gets damaged or split, or I don't place the bullet right, or maybe some odd other thing happens. And I like to check the powder drop every so often. When one of those things happen, you have to restart the progression and during restart you might have to dump a throw of powder or re-prime a case. And for my 38 Special loads I use Bullseye powder which, even with an aftermarket LED light on the press, I can't visually see the powder charge to check it. So, this is where I think the squib load was produced. I may have been fixing an issue, dumped out a powder charge and put that case back in sequence, indexed it, and kept making ammo. Bullseye powder has tiny grains and likely a small amount was left in the case after dumping causing a squib.

Yes, switching to a powder that fills the case more would help prevent this situation, but I really like Bullseye for many reasons and happen to have around 20 pounds of it on hand! Take 20 pounds times 7,000 grains divided by 2.8 grains equals another 10 years of shooting for me!
 
I have not experienced a squib.
I'd rather change a flat tire in the dark than have to fix a squib! :(
Ñext time I get a flat, I'm calling you,and next time you get a squib,call ME!
I think they are not a big deal (the squibs, not the flat).
That is, unless you put another one in behind it.
Far more serious is a double charge.
 
Gentlemen,

After almost two decades of casting and reloading my own practice ammo I had my first squib during my last range trip! Dang it! In the back of my mind, I have always considered a squib possible but after many tens of thousands of rounds that went bang, I thought maybe my reloading process was good enough. But obviously I was wrong, and it was my turn. I have read in articles and heard from other reloaders that if you reload or shoot long enough, you'll experience a squib. That bit of information held true for me. And YES, the description of what it sounded like was "Pfuzzz....." and no notable recoil, this was just like it's been described to me before.

I was shooting 158 grain cast LSWC out of my model 60-9. After the "Pfuzz" sound I kept the muzzle down range thinking hang fire. After a few seconds, nothing, so I tried to open the cylinder, nothing, locked up. Knowing I had two live rounds left I put it away until I got back home. Sure enough, when I shined my bore light down the muzzle there it was, a LSWC bullet lodged in the forcing cone with some amount still in the cylinder throat.

I use a pretty heavy roll crimp, and I have experienced a few cartridges over the years when the primer went off but without any powder in them, the bullet didn't break the crimp or broke the crimp and only moved a little bit. So, I have failed to drop power in the past and on a rare occasion have had rounds that go bang with a much greater recoil than expected, too much powder. But I'm guessing this time I made the mistake of having just enough powder in there to launch the bullet into the forcing cone. Dang it!

I'm pleased that it took me this long to experience a squib and thankful it locked up the gun as to prevent another trigger pull!

Anyway, the takeaway, regardless of experience or skill level, that Murphy guy doesn't care!
I had 2 squibs from store-bought ammo and that gave me all the incentive I needed to do my own reloading. Just pay attention to the powder. Glad you didn't blow things up.
 
Having reloaded for 40+yrs, I have had squib loads! This usually results in the end of the shooting session and retiring to the shop to clear the stuck bullet! However, on one of these experiences I fired a 44 mag, close to max load, heard and felt the squib! I laid the gun down and observed unburnt powder, H110(ball powder), running out of the BC gap! I was never able to determine the cause! Was it a bad primer, bad powder, tumbling media stuck in the primer hole, or just plain operator error?
jcelect
 
I had 4 squibs out of 75 38spl using 125 gr Plated Berrys. I had a couple before this mess but I now attribute it to the TOO MANY RELOADS on my brass (Close to 20) I believe the brass is not expanding fast enough, not sealing and sending the bullet mid barrel in my LCR. I'm finally dumping that brass and starting with a fresh batch of once fired. I don't believe I had that many bad Winchester Small Pistol primers or Missed Powder drops - Huge Pfuzzz.... on each one with a very noticeable smoke cloud.
 
Gentlemen,

After almost two decades of casting and reloading my own practice ammo I had my first squib during my last range trip! Dang it! In the back of my mind, I have always considered a squib possible but after many tens of thousands of rounds that went bang, I thought maybe my reloading process was good enough. But obviously I was wrong, and it was my turn. I have read in articles and heard from other reloaders that if you reload or shoot long enough, you'll experience a squib. That bit of information held true for me. And YES, the description of what it sounded like was "Pfuzzz....." and no notable recoil, this was just like it's been described to me before.

I was shooting 158 grain cast LSWC out of my model 60-9. After the "Pfuzz" sound I kept the muzzle down range thinking hang fire. After a few seconds, nothing, so I tried to open the cylinder, nothing, locked up. Knowing I had two live rounds left I put it away until I got back home. Sure enough, when I shined my bore light down the muzzle there it was, a LSWC bullet lodged in the forcing cone with some amount still in the cylinder throat.

I use a pretty heavy roll crimp, and I have experienced a few cartridges over the years when the primer went off but without any powder in them, the bullet didn't break the crimp or broke the crimp and only moved a little bit. So, I have failed to drop power in the past and on a rare occasion have had rounds that go bang with a much greater recoil than expected, too much powder. But I'm guessing this time I made the mistake of having just enough powder in there to launch the bullet into the forcing cone. Dang it!

I'm pleased that it took me this long to experience a squib and thankful it locked up the gun as to prevent another trigger pull!

Anyway, the takeaway, regardless of experience or skill level, that Murphy guy doesn't care!
Us old Revolver shooters from the 60's like me, are very familiar with the various maladies that may occur when shooting revolvers. You are fortunate the round did not make it into the barrel, where a less alert shooter could easily fire another round behind it...often resulting in a "ringed" barrel. So, don't beat yourself up...it can and has happened to a Lot of us over the years...you recognized it early and will modify your procedure accordingly.
 
I had one a few years ago with a 9mm reload. Soooo, I know it was something I caused. Probably a case that got a light powder charge or none at all. Bullet was partially stuck in the barrel so the next round couldn't camber. Lucky me.

I don't use a progressive press and visually check ever case for powder before I seat. It still happened because of my careless inspection. At least that's I'm thinking happened.

Glad there was no damage to you or the firearm.
I reload standing, so I can look in each case to see the powder and its level, which also prevents an overcharge. So far, so good.
 
Gentlemen,

After almost two decades of casting and reloading my own practice ammo I had my first squib during my last range trip! Dang it! In the back of my mind, I have always considered a squib possible but after many tens of thousands of rounds that went bang, I thought maybe my reloading process was good enough. But obviously I was wrong, and it was my turn. I have read in articles and heard from other reloaders that if you reload or shoot long enough, you'll experience a squib. That bit of information held true for me. And YES, the description of what it sounded like was "Pfuzzz....." and no notable recoil, this was just like it's been described to me before.

I was shooting 158 grain cast LSWC out of my model 60-9. After the "Pfuzz" sound I kept the muzzle down range thinking hang fire. After a few seconds, nothing, so I tried to open the cylinder, nothing, locked up. Knowing I had two live rounds left I put it away until I got back home. Sure enough, when I shined my bore light down the muzzle there it was, a LSWC bullet lodged in the forcing cone with some amount still in the cylinder throat.

I use a pretty heavy roll crimp, and I have experienced a few cartridges over the years when the primer went off but without any powder in them, the bullet didn't break the crimp or broke the crimp and only moved a little bit. So, I have failed to drop power in the past and on a rare occasion have had rounds that go bang with a much greater recoil than expected, too much powder. But I'm guessing this time I made the mistake of having just enough powder in there to launch the bullet into the forcing cone. Dang it!

I'm pleased that it took me this long to experience a squib and thankful it locked up the gun as to prevent another trigger pull!

Anyway, the takeaway, regardless of experience or skill level, that Murphy guy doesn't care!
Let me say first of all, if you have experienced reloads with no powder then you need to tighten up your reloading as that should not happen. If it does then sooner or later a squib in inevitable. I have been purchasing some reloaded ammo from auctions as much as to obtain the brass. I had a squib in a Win '94 in .357mag and since I have been putting my grandson to work weighing every round. That can be a good way to check for rounds with no powder or a double charge.
 
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