If my memory serves me, It was Blazer Brass ammo. Since I don't load 40, I never get a good look at the brass anymore. Maybe I'll shoot a few rounds next weekend to see.
"What would a $2,000 Geissele Super Duty do that a $500 PSA door buster on Black Friday couldn't do?" - Stopsign32v
Seen this before. The person who posted said it was range pickup brass - not something they fired. This looks to be a round from a 223cal bang stick used by divers. You get the bulge when the darn thing is not screwed in tight like it should. I had a 223 bang stick back in 1983 when diving around Florida. I made a piece of brass like this once - only not as bad - when some sand got into the threads and I didn't have the chamber section screwed down and seated in tight.
Kevin
I've seen this with dirty open bolt 9mm FA.
Makes me wonder if this was a very dirty/misadjusted SAW or similar. Not an AR.
RLTW
“What’s New” button, but without GD: https://www.m4carbine.net/search.php...new&exclude=60 , courtesy of ST911.
Disclosure: I am affiliated PRN with a tactical training center, but I speak only for myself. I have no idea what we sell, other than CLP and training. I receive no income from sale of hard goods.
I am not familiar enough with the saw other than internet reading to know.
But really looks like out of battery, and you know the AR won't do this. OOB, anyway.
Personally, I don't think it was premature extraction. If the residual pressure was enough to swell the case, it would have still had major friction with the chamber almost by definition. And would have ripped the rim off or similar.
So I'm thinking OOB, and probably open bolt of some kind. (But what?)
Did not think about bang sticks, back in the day they used 38 special.
After some thinking, I don’t think a SAW can OOB. The bolt must rotate closed in order for the firing pin to protrude. I’ll have to get my mitts on one to be sure.
Perhaps a closed bolt gun like an AR or AK with a seized firing pin slam firing?
RLTW
“What’s New” button, but without GD: https://www.m4carbine.net/search.php...new&exclude=60 , courtesy of ST911.
Disclosure: I am affiliated PRN with a tactical training center, but I speak only for myself. I have no idea what we sell, other than CLP and training. I receive no income from sale of hard goods.
I believe you are correct. It's not a fixed firing pin. And the bolt has to advance to a certain point before it protrudes as I understand it.
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