GA Precision is building me a 6.5 RSAUM rifle and I am trying to decide if I need both bushing and nonbushing dies to properly neck turn cases.
6.5 GAP 4S (SAUM) Comp Die set with bushings (either .289 or .291 bushings) OR
Hornady 6.5 GAP 4S Custom Die Set w/ Micrometer Stem (non bushing)
I was leaning towards the Redding die, but I plan to neck-turn my brass and as I was researching that I found an article stating that non-bushing dies should be used before neck sizing. Then a bushing die is used to resize to achieve precise neck tension.
Plan on using the Hornady 6.5 GAP 4S brass. Chamber is being cut with new .120 FB reamer.
Can anyone comment on this? More generally, appreciate any feedback on which route to go. Thanks.
http://www.6mmbr.com/neckturningbasics.html
Brass Preparation
Before we go any further, size your brass with a full-length non-bushing die and trim to uniform length. Both these tasks are VERY important. If the brass is new, run it over the expander and trim to uniform length. While I don't like non-bushing dies for regular case sizing, this is where they are important. For neck-turning, you have to size the neck all the way to the shoulder junction and a bushing die always leaves about 0.050" unsized (by design, you can't fix that). If all you have are bushing dies, I recommend the Hornady New Dimension as your non-bushing die, they are well made and leave the brass very concentric.
Final Check
And here's the payoff, a perfect, 0.0125" thick neck. It's very uniform around the circumference, usually I only see 1 or 2 ten-thousandths variance which is perfect as far as we're concerned for this purpose. As a final bit of math (0.0125" x 2) + .308" = 0.333" so we calculate 0.007" clearance for a loaded round in our 0.340" chamber neck. Now, with the necks uniformed like this, we can select the bushing size that will give us our preferred neck tension and experiment with various levels of tension, secure in the knowledge that all of the cases will actually have the desired neck tension and thus give a meaningful result to our experimentation.
6.5 GAP 4S (SAUM) Comp Die set with bushings (either .289 or .291 bushings) OR
Hornady 6.5 GAP 4S Custom Die Set w/ Micrometer Stem (non bushing)
I was leaning towards the Redding die, but I plan to neck-turn my brass and as I was researching that I found an article stating that non-bushing dies should be used before neck sizing. Then a bushing die is used to resize to achieve precise neck tension.
Plan on using the Hornady 6.5 GAP 4S brass. Chamber is being cut with new .120 FB reamer.
Can anyone comment on this? More generally, appreciate any feedback on which route to go. Thanks.
http://www.6mmbr.com/neckturningbasics.html
Brass Preparation
Before we go any further, size your brass with a full-length non-bushing die and trim to uniform length. Both these tasks are VERY important. If the brass is new, run it over the expander and trim to uniform length. While I don't like non-bushing dies for regular case sizing, this is where they are important. For neck-turning, you have to size the neck all the way to the shoulder junction and a bushing die always leaves about 0.050" unsized (by design, you can't fix that). If all you have are bushing dies, I recommend the Hornady New Dimension as your non-bushing die, they are well made and leave the brass very concentric.
Final Check
And here's the payoff, a perfect, 0.0125" thick neck. It's very uniform around the circumference, usually I only see 1 or 2 ten-thousandths variance which is perfect as far as we're concerned for this purpose. As a final bit of math (0.0125" x 2) + .308" = 0.333" so we calculate 0.007" clearance for a loaded round in our 0.340" chamber neck. Now, with the necks uniformed like this, we can select the bushing size that will give us our preferred neck tension and experiment with various levels of tension, secure in the knowledge that all of the cases will actually have the desired neck tension and thus give a meaningful result to our experimentation.
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