Okay, so you have a tiny 'CHINK' in your armor. That's why you wear the armor! So it shakes your confidence a bit -- no worries, it keeps you on your toes. You pull the rest (pulling is no fun) and as you do that little bit of manual labor, you think about WHY you are stuck doing it and it helps you to remember.
Me? I think to think that you and I are kindred spirits,
Nick. There are definitely areas where we take different forks in the road but I see far more similarities in our approach to this ballgame than I see differences.
I have stuck three bullets but none of them were my most embarrassing handloading failure. The three stuck bullets were absolutely my fault, but not the same as yours-- mine were not uncharged squibs... each of my three were a whole array of test rounds, loaded TOO LIGHT, using a powder that is arguably appropriate for the the task, and simply being
over-cautious in the load, using plated bullets in revolvers, with the all-too-spacious .38 Special case that doesn't allow for "too wimpy" loads. Anyone familiar with my posts regarding plated bullets and revolvers know that I passionately campaign against going too light. With the pressure escape-valve (flash gap) and too light of a load, a stuck bullet is always around the corner with plated.
Anyway, none of the three stuck bullets led to catastrophic failure. But my single most embarrassing handloading failure was a round of 9mm, 124gr Plated that I crafted with a
SIDEWAYS primer. I dropped the hammer and I hear a pop, watched a little fizzle and wisp of smoke appear from the pistol's chamber area while in full battery.
"WHAT?!" I carefully ejected the round to find a scorched end near the primer and a gorgeous, loaded round at the other end. The primer went POP but the flash hole was blocked so the powder charge never ignited and the entirety of the primer flash happened outside the cartridge case at the breech end.
A sideways primer does happen, but it was a huge personal failure that I skipped over part of my "checks & balances" process for quality control. There is no way that round should have made it in to a box, out of my house, to the shooting range, in to a magazine and "discharged" in my handgun. Obnoxious.
I still have the scorched round, it sits near my powder scale. No harm, no foul, just my most embarrassing goof-up. And the experience is tattooed on my brain and it absolutely
has had a hand in the increased QC of my ammo. That particular round of 9mm has made all my ammo since... better.