Picked up one the Hornady Lock N Load concentricity gage last night after reading some reviews on Midway. I have never worried about concentricity before and thought that it would be nice to see how concentric my loaded rounds were.
The unit was pretty easy to set up, and it allows you to remove the runout in your cartridge by way of a screw that pushes the bullet one way or the other. Some cartridges that were .004, I pushed back to .0005, and so on. Was really able to get it to dead nuts 0, but I figure that was good enough. Seems like a well made product and I would recommend it.
With virgin brass the bullets were running about .002-.004 concentric. Some were a little further out. Never thought they would be that far out of spec. Interesting to me.
My fireformed annealed brass ranged from .001-.0025. I thought that was pretty good too. I am going to check and see how my new Lapua brass will be. I am using standard RCBS FL dies. Nothing fancy.
Just thought that I would share that in case anyone else was thinking about buying one of these units.
What are you guys typically seeing for bullet run out on your reloads?
The unit was pretty easy to set up, and it allows you to remove the runout in your cartridge by way of a screw that pushes the bullet one way or the other. Some cartridges that were .004, I pushed back to .0005, and so on. Was really able to get it to dead nuts 0, but I figure that was good enough. Seems like a well made product and I would recommend it.
With virgin brass the bullets were running about .002-.004 concentric. Some were a little further out. Never thought they would be that far out of spec. Interesting to me.
My fireformed annealed brass ranged from .001-.0025. I thought that was pretty good too. I am going to check and see how my new Lapua brass will be. I am using standard RCBS FL dies. Nothing fancy.
Just thought that I would share that in case anyone else was thinking about buying one of these units.
What are you guys typically seeing for bullet run out on your reloads?