Suppressed in SD
Member
I have a JP 260 Rem upper. Lately I've been blowing out primers. I don't reload (yet) so I've been shooting 2 different kinds of Federal premium. Last year I shot several hundered rounds of 140g Sierra Gamekings without a problem as well as a few boxes of other stuff. 0 primer blowouts. This fall I got my hands on several boxes of 120g Nosler ballistic tips. They shot a little better so I kept with them. Had a primer blow out and jam up my gun deer hunting and since have a many more do the same thing. In fact, I may blow out 3-4 primers in 20 rounds. My gunsmith (who is also a competative long range shooter) looked at the brass and he says "high pressure". Sent the ammo back to Federal and they tested it and say it's normal pressure and velocity. Gunsmith says the the chamber, throat and barrel are all normal and clean. Only thing he can find is the throat is relatively short as you would expect from a manufacturer going for the utmost accuracy. Recently Ive had the 140g rounds blowing primers too. Ive shot more than a hundred without a problem. Am I missing something here? So now here's the kicker. I call JP and they say its no surprise that I'm blowing primers as their 260 Rem was made with the idea of handloading and factory ammo is too hot. He tried to explain that factory 260 ammo is made for bolt guns and a gas gun isnt able to handle that high of pressure. What? Why does that equal blow primers? Is he saying that the throat is cut too short for factory ammo? Why else would the pressure be high and blow the primer? I really need some help here. I can't stand having an unrealiable gun.