In my experience the brass in old U.S. manufactured cartridges gets brittle before the primers go bad. The necks of Skeet 028's 1912 FA .30-06 cracking makes little if any difference other than as a warning to not fire the cartridges in a U.S. Springfield or a pre-64 Winchester Model 70. If they split down at the head there is risk of an eye injury or less significant facial injury. I watched that happen with a 1903-A3 that had a fairly tight chamber. The injured eye ball had to be stitched up. The gentleman was not wearing his safety glasses. The cartridge was a 50 to 60 year old commercial hunting round.
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