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Fired brass won't fit in the chamber
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Originally posted by rwh View PostI just finished reloading a batch of once fired brass and noticed that the fired brass was longer than my no go gauge by .004 inches. I am thinking this is because the bolt is unlocking before the pressure has dropped and the brass is expanding under pressure as the bolt slides back. I had a similar issue with my 223 AR and found that an adjustable gas block solved the problem. However when I tried the adjustable gas block in my 24" grendel I don't seem to have enough gas to cycle reliably when I have the gas block adjusted so that the fired brass will fit in the chamber. Anybody else seeing this? What are my options here? Low mass bolt carrier? Cut some coils off of the buffer spring? One of those JP silent spring kits with a lighter weight spring?
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Is the brass 0.004 longer than the gauge after full length sizing?www.FriendsvillePrecision.com - AR15 Dry Fire Device
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What is your fired brass length? I have yet to trim any of my Grendel brass, and I've been shooting it since 2009.
What chamber do you have?NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO
CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor
6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:
www.AR15buildbox.com
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Originally posted by rwhI am talking about the measurement from the base to the shoulder. My unfired cases measure 1.155. The Hornady reloading manual shows 1.156, presumably that would be a max. My no go gauge measures 1.157 from base to the start of the shoulder, and I can't close the bolt on my no go gauge. My fired cases measure 1.162 from the base to the start of the shoulder, which is .005 longer than the no go gauge, and at least .006 longer than the chamber. With my 223 I can pick a fired case up off the ground, drop it into the chamber, and close the bolt with no issues. With my grendel I can't even begin to close the bolt on a fired case, and if I forget to take the extractor off the bolt before trying to chamber a fired case I usually have a tough time getting the bolt to open again after I try. My goal is to tune my gas system so that I can pick a fired grendel case up off the ground, drop it into the chamber, and close the bolt.
My chamber was cut with a Manson reamer.
Thinking out loud here, you have a 24" barrel (long dwell time), a side charger upper and bolt carrier, and a buffer system I have no experience with either.... I presume your buffer system is rifle length? That limits the off the shelf weights you can play with buffer-wise (compared to a carbine). I probably wouldn't chop the buffer spring. Do you have access to a lightweight carrier you can try without having to buy one?
The devil is definitely in the balance between your carrier and buffer weight vs. available gas--- Both time-wise (dwell) and pressure-wise. That's a pickle, but you already know that... Dang.
Do you feel any extra drag (compared to your 5.56 AR) when you cycle the action?
If it were mine (and assuming your buffer system is rifle length) I'd pull some weight out of the buffer (add additional homemade spacers) and see what happens first before I started buying extra stuff. I could be guessing in the wrong direction though. Normally I'd add extra weight to keep the bolt closed longer (on a carbine), but your extra lengthy smokepole is outside my normal bailiwick.
However you go, I'd change the weight/spring-ratio (starting with the cheapest options first) and then cycle through the gas each time until you hopefully get it balanced out.
Hopefully some of the other "telephone pole" owners can chime in with better insight.
Good luck, and please keep us updated with anything you find.
ETA: At this link you can scroll down to see a pic with a disassembled rifle buffer in it. You'll see the weights I'm talking about. http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.ht...f=118&t=449161 HTHLast edited by Variable; 09-22-2014, 02:18 PM.Life member NRA, SAF, GOA, WVSRPA (and VFW). Also member WVCDL. Join NOW!!!!!
We either hang together on this, or we'll certainly HANG separately.....
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Check to see what your bolt face depth is for starters. Who made your barrel? What load are you using?
If the chamber and bolt are correctly matched, then I think you are having a harsh dwell time that is driving your bolt carrier to the rear too fast, and since an adjustable gas block is not working for you, you can go ahead and use more carrier weight, more spring weight, or both if one or the other does not work.
bwaites had this problem even more with his 28" RLGS Grendel, and some of his hand loads that are totally fine in a 20" RLGS would come out looking like belted magnums when shot through the 28" rifle.NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO
CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor
6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:
www.AR15buildbox.com
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