Let's give the BRX thread back to Lynn and Robert Whitley. One of the interesting things in its many digressions was Al's statement that cases using small primers would come to rule the long-range benchrest world.
Why is that?
Does it have to do with the "power" of the primer? The (usually) smaller flash hole? The more meat in the case head from the smaller hole for the primer?
Things I think I know:
There is probably more, but you get the drift.
So just what problems/issues do small primers address?
Why is that?
Does it have to do with the "power" of the primer? The (usually) smaller flash hole? The more meat in the case head from the smaller hole for the primer?
Things I think I know:
- The less the chemical power of the primer that will still give adequate ignition, the better.
- Adequate ignition is hard to define. It is usually mentioned when something was done to "increase" ignition, and a problem (usually vertical dispersion) goes away.
- If the striker spring is weak, there will be more vertical dispersion
- Some chamberings, such as the Dasher, seem to work better with hotter primers.
- flash holes can be uniformed, either by drilling (always larger), or by swaging (can be made some smaller)
- The flash hole is a metering device. Aside from circumference, length and shape may play a role. Length is determined by the case web, and can't easily be altered.
- The case head is unsupported in the chamber, to allow for extraction How much of the case head is unsupported depends on the arrangement/design of the locking lugs and extractor. With a rimless case and locking lugs at the front of the bolt, it is typically completely unsupported
- If you really, really want to, you can make up steel head cases
- Front and center ignition has been tried multiple times with small-arms cases; there has been no demonstrable advantage
There is probably more, but you get the drift.
So just what problems/issues do small primers address?
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