hepburnman wrote on Apr 20
th, 2023 at 10:04am:
I seat the bullet out into the lands, so the cartridge face is up against the breech block. Not certain if the firing pin force is enough to move the case forward, or if the strike is somewhat mushy to produce an inconsistent primer firing each shot.
Depends on neck tension, crimp, and or powder charge, against force required to seat the bullet into the lands. When seating the cartridge, if there is not enough resistance the keep the bullet from being pushed back into the case, your seating depth, both into the lands and into the case will vary.
If you really want to know if the force of the firing pin will move the case or cartridge, remove the extractor, insert an inert case with an oil soaked primer with the anvil removed, close the action and carefully measure the outside rim to barrel distance.
Close the breech, drop the hammer and remeasure. You will know not only if, but how far.
If you’re using a powder compressed load, you can fill the case with a substitute. In theory actual powder with an inert primer should be safe, but I can’t suggest that.
If it helps, I can confirm that a 45 ACP case, with a 200 grain .308 bullet dropped in to provide resistance, will set off a large pistol primer in a Model 94 Winchester chambered in 45 Colt. It will also set off the primer on an empty case on the third or fourth strike.
Hardness and diameter of the bullet, fouling in the barrel, lube qualities will again factor in to any cartridge movement.
It doesn’t take much to set off a primer. That’s why they are shipped in single compartment trays. Plenty of verifiable story’s of ejected empty brass hitting the primer on a box of ammo sitting on the shooting bench and setting a round off. Or a primer stack in a tube feeder having a primer ignite do to the drop.
What I have to add to this is that a primer that is not fully seated, may not have enough support to fire because it moves in the seat. So somewhere in between the resistance of the force needed to seat a primer, and a 200 grain weight is what is needed
Redneck science, sometimes is pretty accurate. But stay safe.