Bill Wynne
Active member
I have a friend who asked me to load some bullets for a rifle that he is giving to his son. This rifle is a 25/06 AI and is 40 years old and in very good shape. This rifle was used for hunting only so it was not shot a lot. He gave me 73 pieces of Winchester brass marked 30/06 in 5 boxes. The boxes were marked 20 Center Fire Rifle Cartridge Cases and priced at $3.20 each so they were probably as old as the rifle. I loaded them with his load that was marked on his boxes. This load was modest.
I fired eleven rounds at 100 yards with a group of about 5/8" for the first three that was about 1.5 inches low. I adjusted the sights and fired several more rounds that were not as accurate. There were fliers. When I inspected the fired cases I found three out of the eleven with split necks. I don't think he had reloaded them too many times. These case were tarnished so I had cleaned them up in my case tumbler with walnut hulls before I reloaded them. I don't believe these cases had been reloaded many times.
Question: Does brass harden and become brittle with age?
I fired eleven rounds at 100 yards with a group of about 5/8" for the first three that was about 1.5 inches low. I adjusted the sights and fired several more rounds that were not as accurate. There were fliers. When I inspected the fired cases I found three out of the eleven with split necks. I don't think he had reloaded them too many times. These case were tarnished so I had cleaned them up in my case tumbler with walnut hulls before I reloaded them. I don't believe these cases had been reloaded many times.
Question: Does brass harden and become brittle with age?