Any thoughts on the cause of excessive pressure in this .327 Federal Magnum?

How can the same ammunition, from the same box, be over pressure (creating flattened primers and stuck cases) in a revolver and not be over pressure in a rifle?

Logical fail. I stopped watching at 5:05. Couldn't take any more.
 

74A95

New member
How can the same ammunition, from the same box, be over pressure (creating flattened primers and stuck cases) in a revolver and not be over pressure in a rifle?

Logical fail. I stopped watching at 5:05. Couldn't take any more.

You don't seem to understand very much about guns.
 

Carmady

New member
What do you mean by "logical fail?"

That the logical conclusion is the revolver is out of spec in some way/s that would increase the pressure?
 

stinkeypete

New member
Waste of a video.
Contact Ruger Customer Service, explain issues. They will make it right.

Flattened primers is not an indication of pressure other than .327 is a high pressure cartridge. This is various boxes of factory ammunition. It’s not the ammo and what it’s shot in doesn’t change the pressure unless the bullet is touching the forcing cone or more.

Difficult extraction might be overpressure. It might be chambers out of spec too large, too small, chambers rough, or bad brass.

Shooting low...file some metal off the front sight, slow and careful... Or send it to Ruger!

Send it.
 
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mehavey

New member
OOC: What are the cylinder throat diameters compared with both bullet and groove diameters?

jus' askin' . ...
 
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