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Ok I think that was the way I was leaning I got one price down to 7600 for the 60mm and was about to pull the trigger but wanted to be sure. Most of our shots are over 100 yard the coyotes here are skittish.
Seems like y'all both prefer the 35mm I really appreciate all the help man this is such a hard call. On the 35mm what do you think the furthest you could distinguish a coyote, a hog, and a deer would be ?
We live in Amarillo so we have alot of open area. Is the detection range really that drastic drop from the 60mm to the 35? If the 35 could detect out to 600 or 700 I might lean more towards it over the 60mm
Money is really not the issue just making sure I am getting the best bang for my buck. What do you guys that have used both think about the 35mm vs the 60mm? Thanks!
Man yall both must have got a bad rep I got a guy sent me a free seating stem to see if it worked better before he had me send all my stuff in to them to check my issue free of charge.
For anyone still following this I For anyone still following this I follow the method of tuning my seating stem to my bullet using a drill and some polishing stuff and now it is seating so much better about 90% are coming within .0005 of each other still got a few that are a little tight that...
That was one of the first things that Forster made me do The first thing forster had me do was to take this apart and send them pictures of the bullets dropped through the sleeve he thought they might be binding but the dropped in free. while I had it apart I took a picture of the stem doesn't...
Also to add to this the issue has been getting worse and worse. Started with .002 and the .005 then .008 and most recently .015 between back to back seats
I agree with you there I need to ease up a little I think. I think that I will see how the new stem works and give Forster a chance to see if they think its my brass or something else then look into getting the stem custom machined to fit the bulelts
If it comes down to it I will give them a call. I ordered the honed FL die from Forster and all my brass come out very consistent at .2880 which is exactly what I had it honed to. But when I first ordered I weight Redding in pretty heavy but went with Forster since I got there press. I may end...
This was the reply I got from Forster. They seem to have great customer service, I am almost wondering if I got a bad stem it looks like its grabbing the bullets way above the ogive line right? If you have some extra pressure be it through neck tension, burrs on the case mouth, a compressed...
I sent that picture to Forster Customer service and they are going to try to send me a new seating stem and see if that helps my issue, I wonder if it would be worth have the stem custom machined to my Hornady Bullets to make sure they grab at the ogive line
And this is with very light steady pressure I am not jerking it or anything like that or forcing it down. Does the mark seem a little high for the ogive? I thought Ogive was a little lower?
So I got some time to play around with this a little more this weekend and might have figured something out. I checked every possible variable I could think of Neck Tension, Brass Length, Bullet Base to Ogive length, the inside of the necks were all chamfered, ect. Seated 2 bullets back to back...