

Bullet diameter is .308, bore is excellent.Trailboss wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2017 1:06 am claybob86, I don't think it's your powder type or charge weight. 31 grains of W748 is a fine and accurate load for a lever action when pushing a 170 grain jacketed bullet. Have you checked bullet diameter with a micrometer yet? Just to be sure. What does the bore look like?
The ID of the necks measures from .307 to .309, but there might be a bit of crimp left throwing that measurement off. A dial caliper is all I have to measure that with. Outside neck diameters are .330 - .331. I can slip a .308 bullet into some of the cases with finger pressure, some are tighter. Easy to put a flat on the case mouth with thumb pressure.flatnose wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2017 4:17 am Measure the inside diameter of the necks. If they are over .311'', then you may have an oversized chamber neck. This would cause overworking of the brass, and the splitting and powder marks on the necks. Anneal the necks.
Take the fired brass and with your thumb on the back of the neck, push the case mouth onto a flat surface at an angle of 45deg. You should be able to put a flat on the case mouth. If the brass does not distort, it needs annealing.
Check your resized brass, and make sure the dies are not scoring the brass cases upon resizing.
Pisgah wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2017 7:35 am .30-30 chambers in general, and levergun chambers in particular, tend to be a bit generous. Depending on the rifle, full-length sizing may be necessary, but it can very quickly work-harden the brass. You could try neck-sizing only, and if that doesn't work then annealing your cases may help.
Might try a neck sizer, otherwise just live with it. Rifle shoots fine.Griff wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2017 7:56 am My most accurate .30-30 does the exact same thing. Generous neck & shoulder area... But, it has a short throat; outside of setting barrel back a turn and re-cutting the chamber, do like I do, ... live with it. (The reason I just live with mine is that I have several .30-30s and don't want to just load ammo for this one rifle). Like yours, I can fire a piece of brass in this gun just 3 times before it's ready for the scrap brass bin.
If you have only the one .30-30, get a neck sizing die and ream it to match your chamber neck. Determine what diameter your bullets need to be to get neck tension and size bullets accordingly. Then work up loads based on that combo...
My rifle that does that wears an aftermarket barrel. I was told when I had it installed the chamber was very rough, and should have them trim the barrel and recut the chamber... I didn't wanna go to that expense, and left it alone... 28 years later... still shoots better than I can see... actually, now, it can shoot MUCH better than I can see! I buy once fired brass, load it 3 times, and toss it. It's probably seen more rounds thru it than the rest of my 30-30s put together.
^^^ +1 ^^^ From the picture,I would guess that the chambers shoulder area is not where it should be. Setting the shoulder back to SAAMI spec is causing that area to be overworked and fails. I would back the die out about 1/16" and try again. If you have a case length comparitor gauge set ( Hornady) you could check this easily.marlinman93 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 10:58 am Before doing anything the first thing I'd do is a chamber cast. But I do a chamber cast on every gun I buy before I start loading for it, just so I can see all the details of the gun's chamber and get my brass and specs correct for the gun. A chamber cast might tell you things you can't see any other way.
The load of 31.0 grains of 748 is OK, but my manual shows it at the minimum charge for that bullet weight and that powder. Once you've done the chamber cast and see it's all OK, you might bump it up a grain and see if it changes any splitting issues?
For any cartridge I never start with the sizing die bumping the shell holder - sometimes this will cause trouble.Chuck 100 yd wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 12:50 pm^^^ +1 ^^^ From the picture,I would guess that the chambers shoulder area is not where it should be. Setting the shoulder back to SAAMI spec is causing that area to be overworked and fails. I would back the die out about 1/16" and try again. If you have a case length comparitor gauge set ( Hornady) you could check this easily.marlinman93 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2017 10:58 am Before doing anything the first thing I'd do is a chamber cast. But I do a chamber cast on every gun I buy before I start loading for it, just so I can see all the details of the gun's chamber and get my brass and specs correct for the gun. A chamber cast might tell you things you can't see any other way.
The load of 31.0 grains of 748 is OK, but my manual shows it at the minimum charge for that bullet weight and that powder. Once you've done the chamber cast and see it's all OK, you might bump it up a grain and see if it changes any splitting issues?
I bet your fired brass would not even come close to chambering in a normal .30-30 rifle chamber.
Not that you need to have the barrel replaced or set back and rechambered. You just need to shoot fireformed brass and not over size the brass when reloading. I would size the minimum amount possible and still get a good bullet friction fit (bullet pull).
Treat it like a wildcat. You may have to anneal the brass first and seat bullets out enough th give zero headspace on that first fireform shot. A fun project !