I put my first rounds through a new Shield .40 today. At around the 40th round, I experienced a cartridge detonation and case-head separation in the ejection port. I've been following the kaboom and case bulging threads and I offer this additional incident as a data point. I make no judgments at this time because this certainly could have been my fault.
Here's what I know.
Again, no judgments yet. I plan to watch closely for further problems.
Here's what I know.
- Serial # is HMXxxxx
- It was a reload.
- Is it possible that I could have overcharged the reload? Sure. If I did overcharge it, it would be the first cartridge in 20,000 rounds of reloading across 13 calibers and 18 years.
- Was the brass old and/or weak? Possible. I never use brass cleaner (to avoid weakening the brass) and only use walnut media for cleaning. Hence the staining on the brass. The brass could be up to 18 years old but could be only reloaded a couple times. I hand-inspect each piece of brass before reloading.
- I had regular FTFs in those first 40 rounds. I was shooting FMJs and lead semi-wadcutters. The lead semi-wadcutters FTF'd pretty regularly. Some of the FMJs also failed to feed and I had one FMJ that had a significantly set-back bullet as a result. (Note: I put a meaty taper crimp on all semi-auto rounds and I don't experience FTFs with these rounds in my Beretta 96F.)
- I inspected my brass after the session and I had significant case bulging on about 10% (about 10 cartridges) of the rounds I fired. I wasn't paying attention enough to associate the bulged cases with any particular bullet. These are middle-of-the-road reloads that I previously loaded up for my Beretta 96F. I intended to throw a variety of rounds at the Shield today to gauge its ability to eat what I give it. I'll pay more attention and be a little more methodical next time.
- On several cartridges, I needed to tap the back of the slide to put it in battery.
- No squibs. All bullets clearly came out of the barrel and hit the target.
- Other than some power and brass fragments to the hand and face, there were no other flying bits. (Thank you, eye protection.)
- Post-incident inspection showed no damage to the firearm and I continued to fire it after the detonation.
Again, no judgments yet. I plan to watch closely for further problems.
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