Great Graybeard,
I was wondering if someone was going to get to the real meat and potatoes of the issue, Extreme and dangerious pressures. Thanks.
For a new reloader, and maybe a few of you oldies, there is another area where tight necks can cause problems and or distroy guns and body parts.
This is in forming cases from larger cases. Example 30/06 or 308 to .243.
When this is done, the end result can be extreme pressures because of over size brass and the lack of expansion room for safe release of the bullet from the case neck.
In this case, it is not due to an overly long case jamming into the chamber throat, providing of course you have done your job and checked and/or trimmed as needed, but rather a problem of neck thickness.
I made 243s from 308s for quite a long time with never a problem. However, I was with a friend one time when the bolt of his Sako fell onto the shooting mat in pieces when he cycled the bolt.
The extractor and some other parts, probably a spring or? - happened years ago - fell out, along with the primer.
After that shot, the primer could be placed back in the primer pocket of that case and rattled around there had been so much expansion.
Back in those days, we really didn't know the reason for the extreme pressures, we just knew something was wrong.
It was years later, when another friend brought me an artical about a nice 243 - model 70 being blown up/distroyed by just such a thing - 308 cases formed to 243.
The problem?
The case neck thickness.
When the case neck is reduced in dia. that brass must go some where, and it goes into an overly thick neck which may or may not cause a problem.
This will all depend on the thickness of the brass before forming and the tolarence of the neck portion of your 243 chamber.
The solution, ream or turn the neck of the formed 243 case before the first firing.
I choose to turn my necks, feeling that the neck will remain more in line with the case rather then be reamed off center to the case body.
You would be amaised at just how many NEW, factory cases have off center necks, but they sure show up when a new factory case neck is turned. It is not unusual to have a third of the outside case neck never be touched by the cutter.
Anyway, don't forget to reduce that neck thickness on those formed cases, as it is every bit as important as keeping neck length correct.
Keep em coming!
CDOC