6.5 Creedmoor brass observation.

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  • nf1e
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2012
    • 2122

    #1

    6.5 Creedmoor brass observation.

    While priming 500 once fired 6.5 Creedmoor cases this morning, I found something interesting that other hand-loaders might appreciate. Using RCBS universal hand priming tool.

    FC GMM brass had a cull rate of over 25% for loose primer pockets using 210M primers.

    Hornady brass had a 0% cull rate using 210Ms

    Lapua sp brass had a 0% failure with BR-4 primers

    Starline sp brass had a 0% failure with BR-4 primers

  • bruce
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 3759

    #2
    Not surprised. Once upon a time I splurged on a nice batch of FGMM .308 brass. I loaded it with what was at that time my standard .308 Winchester load, a lost that by any respect was mild. Groups were excellent, as good as I'd gotten with R-P brass. But, after depriming and resizing the once fired case, about 1/3 of the cases were not useable due to primer pocket expansion. Only a very few were useable after the second reload. I pitched the brass. Don't know what was wrong, but I just figured I'd use R-P brass since it gave no such problems. Sincerely. bruce.
    " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

    Comment

    • nf1e
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2012
      • 2122

      #3
      Thanks Bruce. You have confirmed my suspicions.
      Over the last number of decades I have shot a ton of Federal Gold Medal Match and then resized the cases and dumped them in a box. Never re-loaded any of it until recently.
      The majority of my handloads for .308 have been Berdan primed brass which I never had any problems with.
      Fast forward. I have been shooting 6.5 Creedmoor for a few years now and only loaded Hornady, Starline and Lapua. Well, bright boy thought, here is a few hundred nice shiny FC cases, why not load them. Just when you think you have it down , a surprise comes up on the scene.
      I won't be saving any more of the FC single use brass.

      Comment

      • bruce
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 3759

        #4
        Please understand that my experience is only my experience. I have used Federal brass from the old Hi Power series with complete success. The problem I had with the FGMM in .308 Winchester I thought was only a anomaly. Given that you have such a large quantity on hand, possibly might be worth contacting Federal w/ an inquiry. JMHO. Sincerely. bruce.
        " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

        Comment

        • nf1e
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2012
          • 2122

          #5
          Dumped something over 5K in the recycling bucket. Nice to have room on the shelves for good brass.

          Comment

          • lyman
            Administrator - OFC
            • Aug 2009
            • 11268

            #6
            When I was a Service Rifle shooter, Federal brass, even FGGM, was not usually kept,

            some of us tighwads would load it once, the toss the brass in the range brass bucket, (and left on the range, the club recycled)


            did you by chance check lengths on the cartridge,
            I seem to recall some would need to be trimmed as well,


            Federal brass is known to be soft

            Comment

            • nf1e
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2012
              • 2122

              #7
              Originally posted by lyman
              When I was a Service Rifle shooter, Federal brass, even FGGM, was not usually kept,

              some of us tighwads would load it once, the toss the brass in the range brass bucket, (and left on the range, the club recycled)


              did you by chance check lengths on the cartridge,
              I seem to recall some would need to be trimmed as well,


              Federal brass is known to be soft
              Yes, length was all over the place. I trim all my brass using a Giraud trimmer. After sizing and before getting dumped in the Thumler with ss and dawn for it's second cleaning, it get's run over the Giraud as a precaution.

              Comment

              • fguffey
                Senior Member
                • May 2012
                • 684

                #8
                Years ago I purchased cases from an iron and metal salvage yard. In all appearance the cases looked new/unfired. I sorted the cases into groups of 20 and then started to load them; I thought they were magnificent cases. By the time I had fired some of the groups 3 times I came across a warning about cases that were recalled because there 'could' have been a problem with annealing. I did not need the cases so I moved them to the collectable case drawer. In my travels I have found a few hundred cases that have passed through reloaders hands that have fired multiple times with no serious after effects.

                The first time I fired the cases I used maximum loads; before loading I measure the diameter of the case heads, primer pockets and flash hole diameters. If the case heads were soft the case heads would have expanded, the primer pockets would have increased in diameter and the flash holes would have increased in diameter also.

                Again, I did not need the cases but I did stop using them. I had to consider there was something about annealing that did not effect all of these cases. And then there was a chance the problem with annealing did not effect/soften the case heads, instead there is a chance the problem caused the case heads to harden. Failure of a case head by hardening would be catamorphic. And then there was another problem I had to consider; there was a chance someone quoted the year stamped on the case head incorrectly. So, I moved two years of cases from that one arsenal.

                And if I thought Federal cases were soft I would measure the diameter of the case heads and then load them with MAX loads, fire and measure again. That was then but in the age of the Internet, who knows?

                F. Guffey

                Comment

                • BlitzKrieg
                  Senior Member
                  • Oct 2009
                  • 573

                  #9
                  Same cull rate for Federal brass ...308 and 6.5 Creedmoor. Federal brass is purpose built not to be beneficial for reloaders.

                  Comment

                  • nf1e
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2012
                    • 2122

                    #10
                    All makes total sense.

                    Comment

                    • fguffey
                      Senior Member
                      • May 2012
                      • 684

                      #11
                      Same cull rate for Federal brass ...308 and 6.5 Creedmoor. Federal brass is purpose built not to be beneficial for reloaders.
                      I am the only member that has the luxury of disagreeing. I understand that is offensive, and then there are members that are sensitive and then there are all of those reloaders that woke up on day and became reloaders.

                      AGAIN: I purchased cases from a recycler; he did not understand the cases he purchased from an arsenal were deemed unsafe for use in a firearm. There was no way to determine if the problem was with one batch or all cases with a particular head stamp. I thought they were magnificent cases, I was on the third firing before I noticed a recall.

                      Federal brass is purpose built not to be beneficial for reloaders
                      And now we are back to reloaders that decided they would become reloaders. Does anyone measure before and again after?

                      I do not need new brass, the brass I have was not manufactured to benefit the first user only. Back to the cases I purchased from the recycler; it was determined the cases could have been detrimental to the first user.

                      F. Guffey

                      Comment

                      • lyman
                        Administrator - OFC
                        • Aug 2009
                        • 11268

                        #12
                        guffey,

                        you did not state what the changes were if any after firing

                        Comment

                        • BlitzKrieg
                          Senior Member
                          • Oct 2009
                          • 573

                          #13
                          Since I seek long range accuracy, I got on the slippery slope of weighing cases and bullets and culling both so I had the lease deviance in weight. I had weighed 100 of Federal cases and the variance in case weight was huge so I had to expand that effort to 500 cases so I could obtain boxes of brass that from lightest to heaviest case in a 50 rd box..no more than 1.9 grain difference. Then I weighed my Hornady brass and they were far more consistent in weight and lighter over all. In sum: Federal brass had larger case capacity than Hornady. Now mind you all my Fed and Hornady brass was from same lot of Fed or Hornady. Of course when doing so with Lapua brass...very consistent case weight.

                          So beyond primer pockets growing loose after 2nd reloading, I had to cull Fed brass by weight in order to get the best performance out of them, otherwise I'd get flyers all the time and that was because of pressure variances in Fed cases ...far far more so than Hornady cases.

                          I still weigh cases as its beneficial to accuracy with Hornady brass. I cease procuring Fed ammo to obtain brass to reload and as soon as my supply of Fed brass for 6.5Creedmoor is used up, I'll never use Fed brass for 6.8 Creedmoor again.

                          I buy my bullets in 1000 rd boxes, weight them out and cull by exact weight. Every box of hand loads has bullets of exact weight on those rounds and this really pulls in accuracy... at 1000 yds, it pays off. At 600 yds or below: waste of time.

                          Just what I am experiencing.
                          Last edited by BlitzKrieg; 12-06-2019, 04:34.

                          Comment

                          • JohnMOhio
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 1545

                            #14
                            BlitzKrieg, since your doing the above listed procedures for 1,000 yard shooting, do you also check for run out on your loaded rounds. Thanks in advance. John M.

                            I have, some years back, was told that Federal has always been a softer brass and to be avoided. The inconstancy of the weight had to do with their formula for brass and the manufacturing process. It would also affect the volume that individual cartridge would have assuming the desired wall thickness they were trying to obtain in the body.
                            Peace is that brief glorious moment in history when everybody stands around reloading.
                            Author unkown.

                            Comment

                            • BlitzKrieg
                              Senior Member
                              • Oct 2009
                              • 573

                              #15
                              John,

                              Yes, run out is not an issue be it Federal or Hornady brass. I use Forster Bench Rest Dies and Co Axl press. The only issue I flag is Federal brass craps out with loose primer pockets rapidly and case volume is hardly consistent. Hornady brass lasts longer, has better tolerances.

                              My loads are stout , I shoot 1000 yds only with my 6.5 Creedmoor and as all know, the higher charges loads excellerate primer pockets growing loose on any brand of brass. Fed brass grows loose very fast.

                              Often in these discussions we talk past each other. If you are shooting mid range loads , shooting 100 to 300 yds, just about any brass wlll do well and in 6.5 CM...you will have awesome accuracy. So if that fits your shooting then you and I are solar systems away in experiences. Once you cross 600 yd line and move farther in distance, you need max FPS and will shortly see loose primer pockets happening. Rate of this is significantly higher with Fed Brass in my experience.

                              Fed 6.5 CM ammo is the cheapest found so many buy it with idea they gain great brass and feel compelled to defend its quality....as said if you are a short range shooter you can defend Fed brass serves you well, if you are a long range shooter, you will find out what I posted is valid.

                              I got over 1000 each 1x fired Fed brass and 700 1x fired Hornady brass for 6.5 CM. I got no skin in the game slamming Fed Brass as I own a lot of it. I wish Fed Brass was as good as Hornady for my purposes.

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