German,
I was under the impression, perhaps wrong, that there can be a difference between "flame size" and brisance; and that it is "brisance" we are really concerned with in primers.
That said, one of the chamberings I shoot is a 6mm based on the 6.5x54 MS case, which uses a large primer. Based only on group size, the traditional "mild" primers -- Fed 210, CCI-BR, RWS, etc. did not shoot as well as old Remington 9-1/2 "Kleenbore" primers. Fed 215 magnum primers were better than 210s, but not as good as 9-1/2. Maybe a standard CCI would rival the 9-1/2's; I didn't have any to test.
This is a longer, skinner case than usual for a small, 6mm long-range cartridge -- basically a 2-inch PPC. It is also the first time I've found primer choice to matter so much. I wonder if others shooting small (for long range) 6mms have found similar grouping results. It has not held true for the other long, skinny case I've used -- the 6.5/270 improved, or the larger 6mm, the 6mm Ackley, which could be called long & skinny -- at least long compared to the .243, or 6/6.5x47.
FWIW
I was under the impression, perhaps wrong, that there can be a difference between "flame size" and brisance; and that it is "brisance" we are really concerned with in primers.
That said, one of the chamberings I shoot is a 6mm based on the 6.5x54 MS case, which uses a large primer. Based only on group size, the traditional "mild" primers -- Fed 210, CCI-BR, RWS, etc. did not shoot as well as old Remington 9-1/2 "Kleenbore" primers. Fed 215 magnum primers were better than 210s, but not as good as 9-1/2. Maybe a standard CCI would rival the 9-1/2's; I didn't have any to test.
This is a longer, skinner case than usual for a small, 6mm long-range cartridge -- basically a 2-inch PPC. It is also the first time I've found primer choice to matter so much. I wonder if others shooting small (for long range) 6mms have found similar grouping results. It has not held true for the other long, skinny case I've used -- the 6.5/270 improved, or the larger 6mm, the 6mm Ackley, which could be called long & skinny -- at least long compared to the .243, or 6/6.5x47.
FWIW