So I've hit a dilemma and have 2 ways to go with it. What would you do?
I have 10s of thousands of once fired brass from the same headstamp. Upon measuring the case walls, they're in the ballpark but some do differ a bit. Since the brass is in 50 cal cans randomly, there's no way to 'sort' by neck wall thickness.
The ammo made from this will mainly be 55g .223 hunting rounds as well as M193 clone rounds made in bulk. I'm not shooting 600 yards with these, possibly out to 200 out of a carbine but also don't want them to have a larger spread than real M193; these don't need to be match rounds but also don't need to be worse than Wolf or something.
All loaded on a Dillon 650 with the prep toolhead being a Universal Decap, Dillon FL die and Dillon Trimmer. Loading toolhead is neck sizer (bushing OR standard), powder, bullet, crimp.
Option A:
- Turn the necks of brass in lots (couple hundred each time) and then size with appropriate bushing in the neck die on the loading toolhead
PRO - Probably better more consistent ammo.
CON - Way more time consuming and costly
Option B:
- After regular prep, just put a standard, non bushing neck die in the loading toolhead
PRO - More cost and time effective, may not even matter at 250 yards
CON - Less consistent ammo
I have 10s of thousands of once fired brass from the same headstamp. Upon measuring the case walls, they're in the ballpark but some do differ a bit. Since the brass is in 50 cal cans randomly, there's no way to 'sort' by neck wall thickness.
The ammo made from this will mainly be 55g .223 hunting rounds as well as M193 clone rounds made in bulk. I'm not shooting 600 yards with these, possibly out to 200 out of a carbine but also don't want them to have a larger spread than real M193; these don't need to be match rounds but also don't need to be worse than Wolf or something.
All loaded on a Dillon 650 with the prep toolhead being a Universal Decap, Dillon FL die and Dillon Trimmer. Loading toolhead is neck sizer (bushing OR standard), powder, bullet, crimp.
Option A:
- Turn the necks of brass in lots (couple hundred each time) and then size with appropriate bushing in the neck die on the loading toolhead
PRO - Probably better more consistent ammo.
CON - Way more time consuming and costly
Option B:
- After regular prep, just put a standard, non bushing neck die in the loading toolhead
PRO - More cost and time effective, may not even matter at 250 yards
CON - Less consistent ammo