Remington Core-Lokt 30-06 - Failed to Fire?

Antihero47

New member
Hello gents, I have taken my rifle to the range twice. I bought 2 boxes of Remington Core-Lokt Express PSP in 150gr. for my 30-06. I then bought 1 box of the same only 180gr.

Of these 3 boxes, I had 5 rounds that took a hit from the firing pin and did not fire. 2 of these happened back to back.

I then put 20 rounds of Winchester X 150gr Power Point, and every single one fired.

Im mad, but the core lokt doesnt shoot well for me anyways, I had a lot more consistancy with POI with the Winchester.

Anyone else have this issue with this Ammo? :barf:
 
did you put them in a second time an try them again,it could be a light strike.Ive always shot coreloks in my Remington 7600 30.06 I

never had any problems with them.I shot a deer faceing stait on an found the bullet in the guts perfect mushroom.
 
Its Big Green, I have come to expect no less from them. Everyone can say what they will but their quality from top to bottom is not what it use to be.

I'm sure you will get questions about your rifle and this and that but the fact is I havent heard of any other makers factory centerfire ammunition having misfires but theirs. I have not used Remington factory ammunition since 91.

I have always found Federal and Hornady to work best for me in all of my rifles. I have had better luck with the classic, oh its now power-shok line than the premium line offered by Federal. I do shoot Winchester 145gr Power Points out of my 7x57's. It really is ugly ammunition but it shoots very well.
 
I have never had any such experience at all. I have shot roughly 550 rounds of factory .30-06 ammunition and have never had an issue. I know for a fact that at least 200 rounds of the 550 was factory Remington Express Core Lokt. With all of my guns, except for .22 LR, I have never had any issues whatsoever with factory ammunition. I would call the factory and tell them what happened. Ammo companies take quality issues fairly seriously and it might lead to a recall or a refund. It has also been my unproven opinion that Winchester produces higher quality ammunition. When I wanted premium rounds for a moose hunt, I went to Winchester, not Remington.
 
Thought about calling the manufacturer, I have yet to have a case of Core-Lokt that goes 20 rounds without firing. But, After scouring the website all I find are sales numbers and the like.

If anyones got the number PM me. As for the placing it back into the chamber and hitting it twice, I have not.

I have 100 rounds of some other ammo coming in, so I guess we'll see...
 
I shoot only the CoreLokt in my Remington 700. I've never had any problems and is the most accurate out of my rifle. Granted, I've never shot the really expensive stuff, but don't feel the need to because it's accurate enough.

Good luck on that!
 
did you check the dent in the primer after firing. My uncle had the same problem with his sako in .223 using handloads.

Two in a row didnt fire and after loading thousands of rounds this was a first to me. I re chambered the bullets and this time they fired. Took the gun to the Gun smith and he said something about a sticky spring.

The gun did not miss a beat after the two miss fires for the rest of the trip but the gunsmith said it could hapen any time again.

I did notice that the dent was quite shallow on the primer so to me the pin was not impacting enough. This could be the reason with you rifle, and the ammo being remington. The Winchester ammo would have misfired as well if this was the reason, and then you would be seaking there number.

Just a theory..
 
After inspecting the fired rounds vs the unfired rounds, the pin strike looks exactly the same. Next weekend when I get another shipment of ammo I should know for sure.

Like I said, im going to drop this Remington stuff either way, it just doesnt want to cooperate with my rifle. I'll place these unfired rounds into the chamber and try it again.

Out of 60 rounds of Remington I got 5 misfires. From 20 Winchester, I have none so far. So... lets see what happens after another 100... statistics point to if its my rifle I should get some FTF's.

We'll see...
 
I generally try to stay away from R-R-R-R-R-Remington :barf: (see? I can't even bring myself to say it) ammo unless there is no way to avoid it.

However, there is always the chance of getting a bad batch of anything.
 
Since I get more fire failures with bulk .22 remington than federal and .30-30 rem is more than Winchester brand in cost by a few cents I have quit buying Rem ammo all together. I would be a hot sumbuck if I pulled the trigger on a deer for the freezer to get a "CLICK".... I mean fuming mad is an understatement!
I understand the room for duds exists more with the rimfire bulk as vibration could settle all the primer powder to one side but for a centerfire rifle round to fail to fire is just poor quality!
Brent
 
Rem. Core-Lokt ammo?

I have shot all different kinds of core-lokt ammo over the years and never experienced a dud.
However, I must say (except for the .35 Rem, 200 gr. core-lokt bullet that shoots awesome) the Winchester brand ammo usually did group better for me at the range for some reason in the last few years.
 
i find rem ammo to be generally dirty and inaccurate.i also pulled some slugs and examined the powder and found several different kinds of powder in the same shells.i bought 22long rifle ammo a few months back with 22magnum slugs in them.they would not chamber obviously.their slugs i used for reloading have been been acceptable in accuracy but very in weight from slug to slug more than any other that i've reloaded.i like their brass but i rework it,debur the flash holes,trim,and resize.never used their primers.i use cci
 
I ran a straight edge on the bottoms and the first rounds primer is sitting flush with the bottom of the round, nothing buldging, and the second round is seated barely a thousandth of an inch below flush... sitting into the round.

:confused:
 
They are probably just duds. Remington may not be the best, but they really are not that bad. Contact Remington. I am sure that any one of the many phone numbers could assist you and get you to the ammunition customer service. Remember this stuff is belted out off of a high tech assembly line. Machines will screw up. Out of the many millions of primers that are made every year there are going to be some duds. I wouldn't worry too much about it. Again let the company know and you might be surprised. Ammo problems do occur and companies are quick to get the recall and refund procedure.
 
I have to wonder

:):):)Remington ammo my not be your favorite but I'm not ready to think that it is junk either. I don't believe I saw what type of rifle your firing it in. Could there be a firing pin protrusion problem? I once took apart a Remington 700 and it had a crud build up in the bolt housing that prevented the pin from protruding as far as it should. How old was the ammo and how was it stored? Is the rifle sort of a high mileage type rifle, could it be a little long in the head space department? Maybe a weak or broken spring? Something is wrong with this picture and you need to figure it out like I said the green box may not be your favorite stuff but it will go bang every time when it doesn't it is time to look and see why not.

Buzzard Bait
 
Purchased the rifle and received it on 10/14/2008. Brand New. Cleaned through and re-oiled. Everything is working fine.

Bought one case of 150gr. and 180gr. at Wally-world from a new shipment the night before. I bought one box of 150gr. from Big 5.

After purchase, the ammunition was stored on the top shelf of my closet for no longer than 3 days, a/c at 76*, carried to the car and carried onto the range... like normal.
 
I've never had any issues shooting Core-lokts.

Are you sure that those rounds didn't receive a light strike? Compare the firing pin strike on the unfired rounds vs the fired rounds shell casing and make sure the strikes are the same.

The only reason I bring it up is this weekend I was shooting my Swiss Rubin 7.5x55 and had one round fail to fire. The safely removing the round, the primer did have a firing pin strike on it but it was shallower than on the rest of the fired shell casings. Out of the 20 rounds I shot, that was the only light strike I had.
 
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