Had this issue with a 6ARC gas gun with no other signs of pressure problems. It occurred randomly and I initially assumed it was just a firing pin issue. Luckily it didn't lead to any long term overstress but after a major bolt lockup I backed everything off. We need more videos on pressure signs like this.
@1340MB Жыл бұрын
Another great tip video. I would be interested in seeing more "pressure signs" videos too. Curious also if a carbon ring might contribute to a blown primer.
@tucobenedicto1780 Жыл бұрын
By "blank" I thought you meant a light strike. I normally hear them called pierced primers. Great video & content. Thanks for your channel.
@adeniranm7647 Жыл бұрын
I had this issue on a new AR build, using factory ammo, in 6.5 CM. It baffled me, since the ammo was factory and the velocity was within the expected range. I never thought about it potentially being a fitting pin issue, but my first instinct was to switch out the bolt for a "high pressure" option.
@Mykaelous11 ай бұрын
I had the same issue today with 6.5 cm Federal 120gr factory ammo.
@95GTSpeedDemon6 ай бұрын
I had pierced primers with a 6.5cm and factory federals. Did some reading, the .308 and 6.5cm share a AR bolt, but the firing pin hole is larger on the .308. This causes the 6.5 to poke a hole. Send the upper out, they replaced the bolt and the problem was solved.
@rdsii64 Жыл бұрын
Until today I had never heard the term "blanked primer". I will from now one make sure I watch for this.
@stevenlaws8239 Жыл бұрын
Always very underrated videos! Thanks again Keith
@markimel3243Күн бұрын
I have a Ruger in 204 that was doing this. I had it sent back to the Factory. Yesterday I tried to shoot it and the very first shot it blanked the primer, (yes this was Factory ammo.) Thanks for your video.
@Vessel74 Жыл бұрын
I had the same problem with a AR10 in 6.5 Creedmoor, well below max pressure. I solved swapping from CCI BR4 to Federal AR (i use small primers also in the gas gun) Thanks for the video!
@jbforged Жыл бұрын
I've had this happen with an oversized firing pin hole and thin cupped CCI 400 primers.
@scott2776 Жыл бұрын
Good vid, I too always called these "Pierced" when I opened the vid I thought you would be explaining light hits that don't ignite the primer. I've had a couple Rem bolts bushed to fix this, one a 700 in 6.5X47L and a 40X in 6PPC. going to a small pin completely fixed the issue, and yes, I keep a spare firing pin in my gear box for matches!
@richcifelli77772 ай бұрын
I'm late to the party, but happen to have stumbled on this at the ideal time: I just ran my first propellant ladder in my new .22 hornet. I had two blanked primers out of 40 rounds--one in the lower part of the charge range, the other in the middle. Thanks, Keith-- I'm gonna take the bolt to my gunsmith and see what gives!
@hansb57 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this video. I had this problem some weeks ago. Luckely I used a chronograph and the speeds were 200 over what I expected and I got the puff of smoke. At home I checked the rifle and no apperent problems. Reloaded 10 rounds exactly the same (of what I thought I had) speeds were as expected and no problems anymore. I'm 99% certain I made a mistake throwing the powder. I'm not such a competive shooter that I need those last 10 fps. So to remain having fun I stay away from anything on the edge.
@lagoonrd4173 Жыл бұрын
He has a video explaining nodes and hot is not the way bro
@davecollins6113 Жыл бұрын
The one point made about needing to attend to the bolt after it happens is a very valid one, consider what just happened within that system. Calling it blanking is a new one on me, but, Keith is an engineer in the Seattle area, and I for one, am used to seeing warped nonclamenture from engineers out of that area, dealt with it for many years. These days, swapping primers isn't as easy as it used to be, proper primer usage for purpose is essential.
@CplSkiUSMC Жыл бұрын
I got a brand new Savage Axis II Precision in .223 Rem last year that was cratering and blanking primers right off the bat with loads that were far below maximum. The firing pin hole, as best as I can measure it with calipers, is .072" and the firing pin measures .068" at the tip. For starters that leaves a .005" difference in diameters that translates to .0025" gap all the way around the firing pin. I have to use CCI 41 primers on all my loads in this rifle when I planned on using match primers for precision loads. The rifle has been a real Jonah and attests to the serious decline in quality that Savage has undergone. Did I mention that it came with a large pit in the barrel near the muzzle and when I sent it back to Savage for replacement, they sent me a new barrel with a hundred small pits up and down the entire bore? So I guess you can add that to the list of possible reasons for blanking primers, it's a Savage.
@davidunderwood3605 Жыл бұрын
Never heard it called that. Just always called it a punched primer usually caused by a too long firing pin. I've seen them like this from high pressure also but never put 2 and 2 together and thought about the brass inside the bolt from flow back. Eyeopener to say the least, thank you. Also explains a couple of things in the far back.
@bpm990d Жыл бұрын
For those that are confused, just google blanking operations. It's a manufacturing term sometimes used to describe pierced primers.
@charleshetrick3152 Жыл бұрын
I do love that my Rem 700 manuals indicate the use of a 25¢ piece for bolt disassembly.
@SimpleLife1971 Жыл бұрын
Hi Keith, I've been reloading for forty years and have never experienced a blanked primer until two days "after" watching this video and I'm not kidding! 😅 I was testing some loads in my bolt gun and using my Labradar to record velocity data. I fired one of the rounds and smoke flowed from the receiver and out of the magazine well. Instantly I thought of your video and the timing of me watching it. I saved the primer, disassembling it to see if I could see anything under the scope and could not. The cup thickness averaged .016 which is inline with the others. No clue why.
@winninginthewind Жыл бұрын
Isn't that always the way?
@BobJones-zw3ui Жыл бұрын
My factory hornady 7mm prc primers experience occasional blowouts. The rifle manufacturer said they ‘fixed’ the issue, which recurs. More precisely, the primers completely separate bottom of the brass cartridge.
@burrco3086 Жыл бұрын
I broke a firing pin and messed up a bolt face years ago, it was way too hot. Great video
@KingKong-bo7nk6 ай бұрын
This happened to me in my ar15 a few weeks ago with 2 boxes of hornady frontier 55g 556. I noticed the rifle was pretty snappy especially since I had just installed new buffer system to reduce my over gassed setup. Picked up all my brass every one had holes in them changed ammunition everything was normal. Got home to clean and had almost 30 brass pimples fall out of my bcg.
@johnny30806 Жыл бұрын
Excellent info, I can confirm this, because it happened to me on my 7mm Rem mag, Reduced the load and all was well.
@whitesturgeon Жыл бұрын
I had pressure issues yesterday on a load I've shot before. No signs on the LRM primers but very sticky bolt. Could be too hot of loads as they were right at Hornady's max, but my first guess was carbon ring?
@usbboo27 күн бұрын
Yesterday after I got my bolt shroud broken and saw big amount of pierced primers (8 out of 30 shots). This happened while I was shooting two types of good quality factory ammo from different manufacturers. The muzzle velocity went down by 16%. Currently suspecting there a carbon ring somewhere within the leade area that in conjunction with the oversized firing pin hole causes overpressure.
@amoseaton98545 ай бұрын
Great video. Having this issue with a Savage currently. 6.5 creedmore. Only with the small primer brass but using CCI 400. No other pressure sign and velocity right inline with expectation. Going to try harder primers.
@shadowironbank546910 ай бұрын
Wow! Great video! You now scared the crap outta me! I think im getting crater primers, will look into it a lill more cautiously, thankyou!
@thecrusaders25166 ай бұрын
Thanks for looking out for us!
@leeNWHuntinganFish47138 ай бұрын
Jack Cleary a Hall of fame shooter who now works for Capstone dealing with Lapua brass Berger bullets an others referred me to his gun smith who is 50 weeks out had said the exact things you stated. I'm way under pressure so trying to find a gun smith. Not knowing what happened 3 times while shooting it made a round Grove around my firing pin hole. If your firing pin drops down like alot do the hole can get warn out plus your firing pin will not be rounded but the bottom edge flat slightly an making it sharp. As you said a bushing all the way back with a smaller diameter is needed. Watch for this guy's that like to take pressures up as well. Another great well informative video. Thank you.
@marksarkaquariums9056 Жыл бұрын
Thank You Very much for this video.I just looked at my last powder test and max load has a blanked primer.26.5gr Benchmark with a 400 cci primer.
@timrink256 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. Be Safe
@yuriydzhura9563 Жыл бұрын
Rem700, 22-250, 1:14”: I constantly had this sign on factory ammunition. I had a lot of troubles with primers pearcing during my own load development (for 55 gn).
@MrNeverlost1 Жыл бұрын
I would like to emphasize that in addition to inspecting the bolt/firing pin assembly for FOD, inspecting the firing pin tip for erosion damage is very important too. In my experience, once the escaping gas erodes the firing pin tip, if not addressed, it will continue to "blank" primers even if there are no other issues.
@stephenkrampert34304 ай бұрын
Trying to get one more load out of a piece of brass can also lead to a tiny pinhole between the primer cup, and the primer pocket leading to a torch effect on the bolt face that leaves a nasty divot
@SeaWhizz Жыл бұрын
Keith - I think you could also mention other reasons that cause higher pressure, and thus blank primers. To my mind they include - seating bullets to ‘jam’ into the lands - seating bullets too deeply in the case - compressed loads - and also I’d say carbon rings/excess fouling that raises pressures. I’ve also experienced blanking when not seating the primer deep enough in the primer pocket. When not deep enough, the primer pocket has an air pocket between the flash hole and primer which can fill with pressure and back the primer out just a short way, into the firing pin hole. Also, if the primer isn’t seated deep enough in the pocket, the firing pin may actually pierce the primer on ignition. Seating the primer deeper in the pocket gives more clearance for the firing pin, preventing it from piercing the primer.
@Teolulz Жыл бұрын
Can you please make videos on these two subjects: 1) does annealing help with accuracy and 2) do you know for sure velocity nodes exist? Or you are not sure and you only do the ladder test (with statistically insignificant sample sizes) in case they do.
@marksarkaquariums9056 Жыл бұрын
Great topic,I'm going to look at the primers really close from my powder test the other day.
@fencingcoach3w Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your honesty and wisdom.
@jimdodd3462 Жыл бұрын
Years ago, with some military brass. The flash holes were off center. This too blanked a few primers.
@geraldclemens1682 Жыл бұрын
If one is running 556 pressures in 223 brass why not just use 556 brass. Could still have this problem I'm assuming, but would make a difference on safety side if things?
@jaybailleaux630 Жыл бұрын
A blown case head is worse. Only blank primers I ever had was loading pistol primers in 223. I noticed it when the rifle missed fired . Bolt was full of cookie cut primer metal. On large firing pin hole, I'd prefer a custom firing pin over bushing a bolt or replace the bolt with correct firing pin hole diameter. I also found pressure spikes with 760/H414 and old H450 ball powders when loaded to the max in 243 Winchester. Would get bolt lock ups and leaky flatten primers occasionally.
@biggus7933 Жыл бұрын
Hi Keith - love the content. I have the same issue with a 17 Rem (same parent case) using factory Norma ammunition in a Sako rifle. Random primer blanking. Is there any way this can be caused by excessive rifle headspace? The firing pin looks fine, and they are factory loads in a decent rifle. Random primer severe deformation and blanking in some. Your advice re it potentially being the rifle itself would be appreciated.
@DadWil Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation .... thanks Kieth.... gotta measure my firing pin diameters // .062 vs .075
@DudeInWalmart12 күн бұрын
Had this problem with a trasheBay special Glock slide. Firing pin channel was machine oversize. No support for the primer brass. Don't by garbage
@markandmellwhiteley7995 Жыл бұрын
l've had blanking primers caused by oversized firing pin holes in mauser 98 actions chambered in dasher that was fixed with using cci small rifle primers a very informative video, thankyou
@glennsimon5657 Жыл бұрын
I had this occur with too much oil on the bolt spring, cleaned/dried the spring, and no more issues.
@richardbriscoe8563 Жыл бұрын
With small rifle primers, if you have not had the firing pin hole bushed, you need to. All the junk gets into the bolt and the trigger. The tip of the pin may be damaged.
@alejandrogerena2649 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the information!!
@Mykaelous11 ай бұрын
I just had this 10/10 rounds fired from an M1A with factory Federal Ammunition. Didn’t notice until I was collecting my brass.
@bluekats777 Жыл бұрын
Awesome, thanks for that!
@thepracticalrifleman Жыл бұрын
I always thought this was called piercing or broaching. Is this something different?
@thomasteac8919 Жыл бұрын
You are absolutely correct .
@allenforaker6720 Жыл бұрын
When did the terminology change from "Broaching" a primer to "Blanking"? This issue has been called Broaching for many decades.
@charleshetrick3152 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always called it piercing.
@josephhomen Жыл бұрын
Could a Carbon ring cause high pressure?
@lelandgaunt7130 Жыл бұрын
Oh boy. This whole "carbon ring" trend is getting out of hand. Now I see how cults happen and how gullible people are.
@beres70 Жыл бұрын
For me it was a weak primer. It happened when I changed from CCI BR4 to 400...
@sonnyburnett2417 Жыл бұрын
Why do we need additional terms with the same meaning? If we just use the term "pierced", we wouldn't then have to explain what "blanked" means. That aside, I like your videos and you clearly are good at what you do.
@robertbrewer2055 Жыл бұрын
Can headspace play a role in blanked primers?
@winninginthewind Жыл бұрын
I'm sure there is at least one anecdotal experience that suggests it can, but do we really know that? The interwebs are full of anecdotes that are incorrectly interpreted on much simpler physical phenomena. If you have too much head clearance (headspace), there are a multitude of associated problems. I would encourage caging that lion before it bites you...
@Windyhillfarm71 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video
@longrange1114 Жыл бұрын
Those looked like Winchester or S&B. I'd switch to cci and likely be okay.
@mikeh5908 Жыл бұрын
anyone have this problem with cci200?
@erichawkins2743 Жыл бұрын
Had to remove a piece of primer from my bolt recently.
@alanwaters27999 ай бұрын
I can’t think of anything that would break the concentration of any competitive shooter than having to stop in the middle of a relay and work on the gun. To much emphasis is placed on velocity and not enough on reliability.
@gregshuttleworth446524 күн бұрын
Ar comp and 60 gr bullets will do that w only a .2 increase in an ar 15 . Be careful
@stephenbaker74998 ай бұрын
Why can't the FTR shooters, find a safer " node", in their load development that puts it in a safer place.?
@carlosbouzo Жыл бұрын
Isto está acontecendo com o meu AR9.
@6n518 Жыл бұрын
Where I come from, we call that a pierced primer.
@tonydevich7937 Жыл бұрын
Very good
@br4713 Жыл бұрын
Dont use N140 with heavy 308 bullets and you won't get pierced primers
@ericrumpel3105 Жыл бұрын
....we call them "punching primers", yes - "pierced" aswell...."blanked" must be the younger generations name,....the firing pin remains through the firing pin hole when fired......naturally, as we all know, & when the round is over pressured, the primer blows back hard enough, from the pressure in the case, that has bled through the flash hole, to get a hole punched in it by the firing pin & the rest of the primer can even flatten out on the bolt face in the primer pocket, but remains in the pocket & a very mynute amount of brass shrapnel may go into the firing-pin hole, if any, it's the firing pin that causes the hole, atleast that's been my experiences I happened to witness at ranges & matches, other than 1 or 2, at the most, punched large pistol primers used in .308 loads out of about a couple thousand loaded with those primers, due to the lighter weight/thinner cup walls,....aaahhhh, & then you mentioned the gruesome remington with one of its many problems......lol.....that explains it all.....lol
@dukeman7595 Жыл бұрын
I the word 'pierced' vulgar? A 'Blank Primer, come on call it what it is, a pierced primer. You sound awful silly calling it a 'blank'..