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Started by DBell, April 05, 2019, 02:34:15 PM
Quote from: Clydetaylor1 on April 07, 2019, 09:17:41 AMI would be done with them. Never seen anything like that.
Quote from: eggshell on April 07, 2019, 10:24:37 AMThis very thing cost my hunting partner a big gobbler. He had a big old longbeard in that we had hunted for years and finally it was his time to die. I was sitting back watching and at the shot I thought, "what the hell is he shooting, I never heard a turkey load sound like that". Well old long beard was hit ( it was 30 yards) but he got to wing and sailed off the hill. when I used to shoot competitive trap and reloaded I would hear shells like that. My friend was beside himself. As I walked out I found his wad about 20 feet in front of him and as I walked the soybean stubble i could see where his shot scattered on the ground, but some of it made it to the gobbler and wounded him. We tore the hillside up looking for that bird with no luck. The next day we went back and found his carcass where the coyotes had caught him. My buddy was incensed with anger and literally fired off all the shells he had to destroy them. I'm not sure the brand, but they were something new he had bought. He went back to the extended range Winchesters he had shot for years.
Quote from: Rapscallion Vermilion on April 08, 2019, 03:44:51 PMI'd avoid any shell that was that close to a failure mode due to a firing pin being even the slightest bit oily/dirty. Take a look at your primers on the fired hulls. Do they look like light strikes?
Quote from: WAGinVA on April 08, 2019, 04:37:24 PMI think I would have to call BS on the light strike. I have loaded hundreds of thousands of target loads and have had some primer issues. Light strikes due to primers set to deep, weakened hammer springs, dirty firing pins, or some combination of all these factors. A primer either goes off or it does not. A primer that is struck hard enough to go off only has one "speed"!