Explain why heavier bullets put more stress on the locking lugs?
Well, that is what I was saying about all things being equal. Speed, powder charge and so on.
Heavier bullet is harder to push......because it is the lugs you are pushing against.
Pressure, yes is what you are fighting, and the heavier the bullet, the more than pressure has to be fought against.
Ever noticed a difference in the felt recoil? It is the lugs that you are feeling. Bullet weight.
For example: 5.56 and 30-06 have very similar pressures very similar, which one has more recoil? The 30-06. Why? Bullet weight. Evry action has an equal and opposite reaction.
Imagine for a moment, this thought experiment:
you load a typical 30-06 round, 150 grain, to your liking..........fire the round, measure the speed, pressure and so on.
Load the same round same powder and everything else......this time with half the bullet weight.
Which pressure would be higher, as an average until the bullet left the barrel?
Answer: the heavier bullet. Why? Because the bullet was in the barrel longer......pressure had more time to build in the barrel before it equalizes with the atmosphere (leaving the barrel).
As I state recently, I was recently (over the past couple years) a part of some testing using smokeless powder, in muzzleloaders, prevoiusly and still thought to be very dangerous (It is not.... with the right data)
During this testing (using a devise that measures barrel expansion) it was determined that bullet weight was a tremendous contributing factor to pressure, #2 only to powder charge.
If you would like, start a new thread on this subject, as many would like to discuss this.