How did you determine the OAL for your loads?
I use the barrel/chamber plunk? test. Its difficult to explain. I basically drop a bullet and casing in the chamber(with the barrel removed) and set the OAL so that the casing is flush with the "barrel hood/lug?-the longest part of the barrel on top". For the first few, i start too long and when its flush, i set my seating die there.
Forgive my ignorance, but this is the method i have been using. Like I said, I am no expert.
First of all, very glad you're OK. I don't see one glaring issue here. I see several possible small errors that could have simply aligned and then erupted.
• First of all, can we please
verify the caliber ? I don't see the caliber mentioned anywhere. 200gr is used in several 1911 cartridges. Everyone has assumed 45ACP ??
• Primarily, as per
Tdogg's comments, your reloading process is not refined
nearly enough. It needs to be re-thought to provide room for physical variations to exist, and needs to provide more safety checks. As per Tdogg, your method of finding your Max OAL is (to put it lightly) awful. OAL has
nothing to do with the barrel hood, and everything to do with
head spacing.
[We can help you improve your process, but obviously you need to learn more and move on from whatever source taught you this very poor method.]• I don't see W231 as an issue. The lesson I probably would draw from that portion of the tale is that... You are not looking into the cartridge case before seating the bullet. And maybe this is because you simply cannot see in there. I highly suggest a lighting system from
KMS Squared Click Here• If you are needing to stop to fiddle with primer size in the middle of reloading, then your basic brass sorting process is not very refined. Large/Small primers is now a way of life with 45ACP. And because it is, you need to focus on it,
or change to a caliber that doesn't have this complexity.
• Finally, allow me to introduce my own reconstructed scenario that might go a long way towards a total explanation. This is only how I see this unfortunate event unfolding, and
may/ or may not have any relevance....
You usually load 200 or 230gr RN for this gun. You were trying Hornady XTP for the first time. Your very basic process does not allow for changes in OAL driven by the bullet, and so you use the same OAL you've always used. The SIG chamber is a tighter-design. Chamber clearances were already nil-to-none with the RN, now with the XTP they are non-existent.
That is to say, the XTP bullets are jammed into the rifling which raises chamber pressure. One might even be long enough to allow a firing in OOB condition, as per Mr
Painter.
And I think that's what happened. The new-to-you bullet starts a sequence of events that's simply waiting on one round to be just 0.010" longer than the rest to cause real havoc.
Have your gun checked by a local gunsmith, but I believe you'll find it's OK. At the most, you'll probably only need some new grips and maybe a magazine.
All the best.
PS. The process we use for finding Max OAL is here....
https://czfirearms.us/index.php?topic=103620.0 And in that document, the first 3 figures give a lot of background information as to WHY these steps are necessary. Bottom line, we're not going to "give you a fish", but rather give you the knowledge to become a "fisherman". Big difference.