Using Redding match bushing neck die on once fired 6mm Creedmore brass, how much of the neck do you resize? I know the info is where somewhere but haven't been able to find it.
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Are you using the Redding micrometer adjustable dies?The nature of the design won’t let you get 100% of the neck, due to the chamfer in the bushing. I set them up so the bushing has the most minimal amount of float, so basically as much sizing as I can get.
Its any bushing regardless of the neck/full length designation of the die. The micrometer just allows you to raise it higher up easier.Are you using the Redding micrometer adjustable dies?
Give us a pic of it. Too large neck diameter in your chamber can compound what you are seeing.Mine leaves a noticeable amount of the neck untouched. It’s enough that I’m wondering if I shouldn’t send it back and get another.
I may be misunderstanding this, but doesn't full length sizing defeat the advantages of fire forming? I understand that if they are hard to chamber it may be necessary. also my current rifle may not be good enough to detect subtle differences but I have the basic beginnings that in the future I will probably have one. Even though I haven't done the tests to find a node I can see an improvement in accuracy, I suppose just from uniformity of charges.I would keep them for now until you figure out what’s what and just buy a separate sizer. A sizer is cheap enough.
The full on comp kit will allow you to tailor each little bit of your brass prep... but are you prepared to see what each little bit can effect and do you have a rifle good enough to see the result of those effects? If not then doing the body and neck separate with your comp kit instead of a full length just creates twice the number of pulls on the press for yourself to accomplish the same thing. If you’re loading on a progressive then it’s not even that.
I may be misunderstanding this, but doesn't full length sizing defeat the advantages of fire forming? I understand that if they are hard to chamber it may be necessary. also my current rifle may not be good enough to detect subtle differences but I have the basic beginnings that in the future I will probably have one. Even though I haven't done the tests to find a node I can see an improvement in accuracy, I suppose just from uniformity of charges.
.I may be misunderstanding this, but doesn't full length sizing defeat the advantages of fire forming? I understand that if they are hard to chamber it may be necessary. also my current rifle may not be good enough to detect subtle differences but I have the basic beginnings that in the future I will probably have one. Even though I haven't done the tests to find a node I can see an improvement in accuracy, I suppose just from uniformity of charges.
I may be misunderstanding this, but doesn't full length sizing defeat the advantages of fire forming? I understand that if they are hard to chamber it may be necessary. also my current rifle may not be good enough to detect subtle differences but I have the basic beginnings that in the future I will probably have one. Even though I haven't done the tests to find a node I can see an improvement in accuracy, I suppose just from uniformity of charges.
Fire forming takes virgin brass that could vary in many different ways from piece to piece (especially with cheap brass) and presses them into the chamber to iron them all out to an even baseline (hopefully). Once they are all that same size you can full length size them minimally (.001-.002" shoulder set back) to avoid chambering issues that happen with the neck sizing but without taking them all the way down to minimum specs and suffering the shorter brass life that goes along with that.
So let me ask you this, when neck sizing and they get hard to chamber are you then going to check each piece to make sure it chambers again? Are you only going to body size those select few that dont? What about the differences between those that chambered and those that didnt and got the body die treatment? Or are you going to just load them up, find they dont chamber, pull all the bullets and powder and primers and then give them a body die treatment and do the whole process over again?
Or would you rather full length size all of them the exact same way in a minimal manner so that each piece has been treated the exact same way, not only uniformity, but for reliability?
Spife nailed yet again, a FL die cannot take brass back to factory specs. I doubt even a small base die will do it either.I may be misunderstanding this, but doesn't full length sizing defeat the advantages of fire forming? I understand that if they are hard to chamber it may be necessary. also my current rifle may not be good enough to detect subtle differences but I have the basic beginnings that in the future I will probably have one. Even though I haven't done the tests to find a node I can see an improvement in accuracy, I suppose just from uniformity of charges.
When I was neck sizing it was always the base of the case right above the case head that was too large and gave me grief (clickers is a common enough term for it). Thats what has made me a Full Length Disciple. This is my testimonial.Or, you could get a bushing bump neck sizing die, and size the neck while setting the shoulder back, and not work the body of the brass every time. This allows you to avoid chambering issues as you've mentioned above.
No shit, until someone scratches their head with this crap, esp when it shows up after the 2nd sizing of brass.When I was neck sizing it was always the base of the case right above the case head that was too large and gave me grief. Thats what has made me a Full Length Disciple. This is my testimonial.![]()
When I was neck sizing it was always the base of the case right above the case head that was too large and gave me grief (clickers is a common enough term for it). Thats what has made me a Full Length Disciple. This is my testimonial.
The clickers can still happen if your full length dies are on the large end of the spec and our chamber is on the small side though which is why its so vital that you measure what is happening during the sizing process.
Or, you could get a bushing bump neck sizing die, and size the neck while setting the shoulder back, and not work the body of the brass every time. This allows you to avoid chambering issues as you've mentioned above.
In a game where consistency = accuracy, does every firing produce the same results?Very interesting. I have not yet had that issue when neck/bump sizing. I neck size and bump shoulders for two firings, then full length size for the third. I find that alternating does not work the brass excessively. I have not had any chambering issues as of now, and my current batch of brass is on its fifth firing.
For the most part, yes. I have an SD of under 5 regardless of how its sized, and the neck tension is consistent between processes. There is slight variation, but the load is more accurate then I am under match like conditions.In a game where consistency = accuracy, does every firing produce the same results?
That full length on the third cycle is likely saving your hide but you could be fortunate to have brass and a chamber that match each other very well and you might never need to full length but you never know until you veer off that cliff. Its safer for a newby to stay on the inside edge going slow than to try and pass around the outside.Very interesting. I have not yet had that issue when neck/bump sizing. I neck size and bump shoulders for two firings, then full length size for the third. I find that alternating does not work the brass excessively. I have not had any chambering issues as of now, and my current batch of brass is on its fifth firing.
Very interesting. I have not yet had that issue when neck/bump sizing. I neck size and bump shoulders for two firings, then full length size for the third. I find that alternating does not work the brass excessively. I have not had any chambering issues as of now, and my current batch of brass is on its fifth firing.
Current rifle is Mausingfield/Criterion/ Vortex/Magpul/6mm Creedmore and haven't fired any brass more than twice, so haven't had chambering issues. Just trying to absorb as much as possible....No, that’s a myth, especially if you’re shooting a factory rifle.
Right, I was not trying to be a smartass, I just know I can be a creature of habit. Not getting into a story, but I watched a rifle and load of mine deteriorate over 4 outings before the light bulb came on.For the most part, yes. I have an SD of under 5 regardless of how its sized, and the neck tension is consistent between processes. There is slight variation, but the load is more accurate then I am under match like conditions.
Using comp kit, neck size first then body die or vice versa. I'm using my once fired brass for now until I get the basics, then go to virgin brass after I get a little more experience. It is starting to look like I need a faster bullet puller, HA!I would keep them for now until you figure out what’s what and just buy a separate sizer. A sizer is cheap enough.
The full on comp kit will allow you to tailor each little bit of your brass prep... but are you prepared to see what each little bit can effect and do you have a rifle good enough to see the result of those effects? If not then doing the body and neck separate with your comp kit instead of a full length just creates twice the number of pulls on the press for yourself to accomplish the same thing. If you’re loading on a progressive then it’s not even that.
When I was neck sizing it was always the base of the case right above the case head that was too large and gave me grief (clickers is a common enough term for it). Thats what has made me a Full Length Disciple. This is my testimonial.
The clickers can still happen if your full length dies are on the large end of the spec and our chamber is on the small side though (more so for wildcats and variants but still with saami stuff as well) which is why its so vital that you measure what is happening during the sizing process, no matter which process you choose to pursue.
I didn’t hear it in the video nor anywhere else I’ve read on this subject but some of my dies change the shoulder diameter .007” I don’t use them and my Redding types s still reduces that dimension .004-.005”I don’t recall exactly so what is too much and what’s ideal I’ve been under the impression .002” reduction in every dimension. Would be ideal as that’s what I’ve been setting my shoulder back is that what I should hope for in a die chamber relationship?
As subes said, if you want a certain spec for each dimension you will need to get some custom dies made.I didn’t hear it in the video nor anywhere else I’ve read on this subject but some of my dies change the shoulder diameter .007” I don’t use them and my Redding types s still reduces that dimension .004-.005”I don’t recall exactly so what is too much and what’s ideal I’ve been under the impression .002” reduction in every dimension. Would be ideal as that’s what I’ve been setting my shoulder back is that what I should hope for in a die chamber relationship?
Put your expanderOk, so I jumped down the rabbit hole and am setting up to handload 6.5CM. It's been well over 30 years since I handloaded bottleneck rifle ammo.
Here's my dilemma. I have a significant pile of Hornady once-fired brass. Loaded factory rounds are pretty consistent at 0.290" on the top half of the neck. At the bottom, the neck is 0.001-0.002" thicker (0.291-0.292").
So, when I use a 0.288" bushing to size the entire neck, I end up with a tighter inside diameter at the base of the neck. I have a .264" pilot on my trimmer and that thing jams tight at the base of the neck on a fair number of cases.
Given the prevalence of Hornady brass in our sport, I can't be the first to deal with this. I really do not want to start turning the necks (I have the tool to do it) if there is another approach.
Thoughts?
Thanks @spife7980. I see your username come up a lot here - thanks for the help you provide to the community.Put your expander mandrel back in the die and you should be fine.
Shoot, I said mandrel above, I meant ball.Thanks @spife7980. I see your username come up a lot here - thanks for the help you provide to the community.
I don't have a separately-sold mandrel (yet). All I have is the expander which came with the die (which I swapped out for the smaller decapping pin retainer). Will this suffice, at least to get started?
If your not turning your necks you pretty much always want to use an expander in a bushing die.Ok, so I jumped down the rabbit hole and am setting up to handload 6.5CM. It's been well over 30 years since I handloaded bottleneck rifle ammo.
Here's my dilemma. I have a significant pile of Hornady once-fired brass. Loaded factory rounds are pretty consistent at 0.290" on the top half of the neck. At the bottom, the neck is 0.001-0.002" thicker (0.291-0.292").
So, when I use a 0.288" bushing to size the entire neck, I end up with a tighter inside diameter at the base of the neck. I have a .264" pilot on my trimmer and that thing jams tight at the base of the neck on a fair number of cases.
Given the prevalence of Hornady brass in our sport, I can't be the first to deal with this. I really do not want to start turning the necks (I have the tool to do it) if there is another approach.
Thoughts?