I just had not one but two blown primers in my 1917 eddystone. I shot quite a few rounds of cheap bosnian Hot Shot 30-06 150gr FMJ through the rifle first and it was grouping about 1.5 inches at 100 yards. So, I fired a few of my hand loaded 150 gr jsp boat tails and found they were striking higher than the FMJ stuff.
Just for fun I decided to shoot a few PMP 165 gr soft points to see where they would hit when sighted for the 150's. Well, the first shot fired fine, the second one, a big puff of gray smoke came out of the bolt! I had just experienced my first bloan primer. So, after I took the bolt out and checked things over I tried to fire another one of these 165s, another big poof of smoke and another hole in a primer. I chambered another one of the cheap FMJs and it fired fine.
I was inspecting the PMP hulls and found out the first one had flown back around the firing pin, the other two were pierced. All of the 150 grainers I had shot showed no flattening or flowback.
What I am thinking is that the powder the PMP factory uses is more temperature sensitive than what I used in my hand loads or the stuff in the Hot Shot from Bosnia. By the time I got around to shooting the south african stuff the barrel was pretty hot, so I think the hot steel helped warm up the powder and make excessive pressure. None of the other loads showed any high pressure signs.
It was about 28 degrees and sunny when I was shooting, but I didn't wait for the barrel to cool down between shots, so i think that is why I had the blown primers. I will take the rest of these PMPs and shoot them off first next time and watch for high pressure.