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irishjack
10-30-2014, 04:31
I have been having occasional misfires with my handloaded ammunition, maybe 10% requiring a second strike to fire the round. I am using Winchester standard small rifle primers and a load of 14.0 gr. IMR 4227 with a 115 gr. lead bullet. Could this be caused by a weak firing pin spring requiring replacement? Or should I try another brand of primers, ie Remington? Or maybe switch to magnum small rifle primers? Any advice would be appreciated.

Doug Douglass
10-31-2014, 05:24
It's the rifle unless the primers are oil damaged.

Tuna
10-31-2014, 09:34
It's not the rifle if 90% of your reloads are firing first time. There is no firing pin spring in a USGI carbine. If your primers are just a little bit high then that can account for the misfires. The primers have to be seated deep in the case with the carbine. If the primers were oil damaged they would not go off the second time. Also make sure your cases are trimmed to the proper length. If a case now and then is just a little bit too long then it will not allow the firing pin to hit the primer the first time but when put in for a second time the case moves and it's just short enough to allow the hammer to hit the primer. A small dent in the primer is from the firing pin when the case is chambered and not from the hammer hitting the firing pin. Case length is critical in the carbine. Cases should not be over 1.90 in length. They must be checked each and every time the case is sized. Trim cases to 1.80 but no more then that. Factory cases are around the 1.85 length.

kcw
10-31-2014, 10:38
I would second Tuna's comment regarding case length. It's a common issue with the 30 carbine, especially if the brass has been fired multiple times. The problem is that the over length brass doesn't allow the bolt to turn enough to obtain "battery" position. Take note of what a bolt that's closed on an empty chamber looks like relative to the receiver lugs. Then, the next time you have a misfire, stop and make the same bolt lug to receiver lugs comparison. What you're likely to observe is that the bolt turn stopped a number of degree short of where the bolt over the empty chamber stopped. For reasons related to safety, the bolt must rotate a minimum number of degrees before the firing pin is clear to move forward under hammer pressure to hit the primer. Mind you, the bolt need not be fully closed in order to achieve "
battery" position. but it must be closed (turned) "enough".

joem
11-01-2014, 05:38
Second Tuns's recommendation on trim length. I trim mine to 1.80 and they go bang every time with CCI, Federal ro Winchester. You might dismantle the bolt (get the right tool) and give it a good cleaning.

phil441
11-01-2014, 10:41
Just for grins, you might want to measure the firing pin protrusion from the bolt face. As I recall it should measure from .048 to .065 inch or so. Grunge in the bolt can give variable readings there.

emmagee1917
11-03-2014, 11:38
Two reasons not to use magnum primers in a .30 carbine.
First , there is not enough grains of powder nor any slow enough powders to justify or warrant their recommendation for magnums.
Second , magnums have thicker cups , making your problem greater , not smaller.

da gimp
11-05-2014, 06:51
silly question.......... but has he made sure the hammer is locked back after every shot? have one that had this problem. swapped trigger groups.

Sunray
11-05-2014, 11:41
Never had to trim .30 Carbine, but as with any semi-auto OAL and case length matters. 14.0 of IMR4227 is .5 under max for a 110 grain jacketed bullet. You may want to look at that too. What brass are you using?
Magnum primers are not necessary. Thicker cups they ain't though.

joem
11-05-2014, 01:13
I check every carbine case for length. Any over 1.85 get trimed to 1.80. I use AA9 in my carbine loads.

PhillipM
11-05-2014, 01:21
When I first started reloading I didn't know about brass flow and my carbine would finally fail to go into battery as the cases grew.

MG08
11-06-2014, 02:44
Would have to go with the reload too. Lots of good troubleshooting info in this thread, but it seems your load is pretty light. I would have to go check, but I was loading 4227 in carbine loads, and seem to remember my load was several grains more. I ram into issues with the ammo not being "hot" enough to cycle one of my M2 carbines reliably, ( hammer down on an unfired round) and I had to bump the load up a bit. I had some commercial reloads that did the same thing. No pressure signs and I do not have the Chrono data, but all cycled the M2s and M1s just fine after the increase.

How does factory ammo run in the gun ?

ChipS
11-06-2014, 04:38
As you were. Carbine case legth is specified 1.280" mimimum to 1.290" maximum. Many responsible reloaders recommend checking/trimming every case to minimum case length specification every time the case is reloaded, to prevent out-of-battery ignition.

da gimp
11-08-2014, 06:18
mg08....... does that/ or did that particular M2 reliably have the hammer hooked with manual cycling of the action? Thank you sir.

ripper90
12-25-2014, 02:57
I have this trouble in my carbines when I use CCI 41 primers. I believe they do have thicker cups to prevent slam fires in the 223 cartridge for which they were made. I quit using them in the carbine.

Ripper90

ncblksmth1
01-05-2015, 09:01
Tuna is absolutely correct about this. Check the case length on your cases I bet you will find the ones that misfire are short. I was able to buy a carbine with the same problem. I found the answer when I test fired. Apparently when the rounds were chambered the brass slipped forward and though the primer was struck it was lightly struck and did not fire. Some of the discount manufacturers used short brass. Try standard factory loads or brass and you will find a difference.

glindes
01-06-2015, 08:47
I had a problems with random non-firing 20 ga shotshell reloads. I was using a single stage MEC JR. press, where each primer must be individually placed in the primer cup by hand. 'Sent primers back to Remington and they said that the propellant was wet, with water. The condensation from my beverage glass! ---to make a long story short... Ever vigilant ! Geoff in DE