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Join contest SubscribeYeah I read it as annealing will keep necks good long enough that case head separation will probably be what fails
Yeah I read it as annealing will keep necks good long enough that case head separation will probably be what fails
I also use the Lee collet/ Redding body die for all my rifle calibers.Like was said above
I use both lee collet/Redding body die or Redding sizers with bushings. The lee collet are my favorite of the two and provide low runout and .0015 neck tension. I use them for 6.5CM/260/308/300 WM.
I agree with using just the Lapua brass. I tried some hornady in the past but switched everything to Lapua or Nosler now. Just don’t use both brands at the same time.
For my setup I anneal every firing. Neck size with lee collet die. Body size with Redding body die (or use Redding FL bushing die)
The less you work the neck during sizing the better
I do the body die first.I would always size the body before the neck if using multiple dies.
I heard today an "interesting" advice from a guy I met at the range: why don't you screw up your FL sizing die and size only the neck part (ca. 4mm), so you will get the proper neck tension and you won't lose the benefits of a fireformed brass at the same time.
Does it make any sense to you? What about a shoulder bump? This method would totally skip the shoulder bump...
I know what it is. Eric Cortina says it's stupid. What do you say?
You can’t use a full length die without sizing the whole body if it’s touching the case in. It’s in the name, full length. It’s going to touch the diameters no matter what. If it doesn’t then send that piece of shit die back because its mislabeled or miscut.Can you explain what FL sizing means to you? When I hear to Eric I think he meant by that something else than standard use of a standard FL sizing die. Do you just FL size all the way down the whole brass or you just bump the shoulder back?
You are right. It seems that the friendly advice to screw up the FL sizing die to achieve neck sizing only does not make much sense.But what you hear with full length sizing vs bumping shoulders aren’t two separate things, they are different degrees of the same thing.
Yep, and with it up a smidge and the diameters still getting squeezed you will find that the shoulder actually moves forward, like a play dough snake when you roll it thinner it grows longer unless the die shoulder is there to stop it.You are right. It seems that the friendly advice to screw up the FL sizing die to achieve neck sizing only does not make much sense.
I heard today an "interesting" advice from a guy I met at the range: why don't you screw up your FL sizing die and size only the neck part (ca. 4mm), so you will get the proper neck tension and you won't lose the benefits of a fireformed brass at the same time.
Does it make any sense to you? What about a shoulder bump? This method would totally skip the shoulder bump...
Necessary? No. But the mandrel is the most consistent means to getting necks the same.@spife7980 I mean after FL sizing the brass many people (see this thread above) do the expander die with a mandrel to open the neck to a certain pre-defined diameter. Is it necessary in precision reloading? this is my question.
thank you. this was exactly my assumption.Necessary? No. But the mandrel is the most consistent means to getting necks the same.
Using just a die can leave the necks too small and with the thicker parts pushed for their inside than the thinner.
The expander ball takes care of that too small and irregularities but they are generally small so they don’t touch all of the neck at once and they are on a thinner rod and can be pushed off center a smidge with the brasses natural resistance to sizing.
The mandrel is big and the entire necks gets put onto the same rod all at the same time for a long dwell time and can’t really be pushed off center so easily. It’s just a more consistent method overall, it just takes 2x as many pulls of the press handle on a single stage press to use them.
I was hoping to avoid brass issues by using premium brass. The test will be when I go shoot it. Along those lines I have 200 rounds of this new brass. Should I shoot them all before annealing and sizing the once shot brass?Maybe those few cases had way softer necks than the others.
I know this is an old post but what do you personally consider over stretching of new brass, at the shoulder, on the first firing. ThxCHS also comes from brass flow under pressure and from the initial fire forming. A case initially fired from an oversized chamber will chs a lot sooner than one that was fired in a tight chamber even with subsequent minimal shoulder bumping. Also, the higher the pressure the more the case stretches the more the case walls thin out.
I was hoping to avoid brass issues by using premium brass. The test will be when I go shoot it. Along those lines I have 200 rounds of this new brass. Should I shoot them all before annealing and sizing the once shot brass?
I know this is an old post but what do you personally consider over stretching of new brass, at the shoulder, on the first firing. Thx
On my 6.5 cm the factory hornady match ammo brass grows .003 -.0035. Virgin Alpha brass grows .0045-.005.More than .005”
sorry if this is silly, but did you shrink the neck anyway with a FL or a neck die before applying the mandrel step? new brass is new brass, just freshly annealed in case of Lapua, but you can't trust them...ID will not be consistent, at best.I know this is an older thread, but still have an issue. My problem is new Lapua brass run over a mandrel. Just starting my load development. 18 cases checked with a pin gauge to confirm all sized to the same inside diameter. Using a Wilson seating die and a arbor press no gauge. All cases were deburred inside mouth chamfer. Still had a few cases that took way less effort to seat the bullets than most of the others. I'm stumped. Hornady A-tip bullets. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Have not shot them yet.
On my 6.5 cm the factory hornady match ammo brass grows .003 -.0035. Virgin Alpha brass grows .0045-.005.
No I did not size the case or neck. I did however check the ID with a pin gauge and all were .002 under the bullet diameter. All felt the same with the pin gauge.sorry if this is silly, but did you shrink the neck anyway with a FL or a neck die before applying the mandrel step? new brass is new brass, just freshly annealed in case of Lapua, but you can't trust them...ID will not be consistent, at best.
Neck Tension | |||
0.0141 | 0.01475 | 0.01505 | 0.01435 |
Total | 0.05825 | ||
Average | 0.0145625 | ||
Thickness | 0.029125 | ||
OD | 0.337 | ||
0.0145 | 0.0147 | 0.01435 | 0.0147 |
Total | 0.05825 | ||
Average | 0.0145625 | ||
Thickness | 0.029125 | ||
OD | 0.337 | ||
0.01455 | 0.01445 | 0.01485 | 0.0146 |
Total | 0.05845 | ||
Average | 0.0146125 | ||
Thickness | 0.029225 | ||
OD | 0.337 | ||
0.0148 | 0.01475 | 0.0145 | 0.0147 |
Total | 0.05875 | ||
Average | 0.0146875 | ||
Thickness | 0.029375 | ||
OD | 0.337 | ||
0.0146 | 0.0148 | 0.0147 | 0.0143 |
Total | 0.0584 | ||
Average | 0.0146 | ||
Thickness | 0.0292 | ||
OD | 0.337 | ||
Overall | |||
Average | 0.014605 | ||
Thickness | 0.02921 | ||
OD | 0.33721 | ||
Bushing | 0.335 |
Wow! Is that a spreadsheet or all manual.Here is my process for determining my bushings and mandrels:
Neck Tension 0.0141 0.01475 0.01505 0.01435 Total 0.05825 Average 0.0145625 Thickness 0.029125 OD 0.337 0.0145 0.0147 0.01435 0.0147 Total 0.05825 Average 0.0145625 Thickness 0.029125 OD 0.337 0.01455 0.01445 0.01485 0.0146 Total 0.05845 Average 0.0146125 Thickness 0.029225 OD 0.337 0.0148 0.01475 0.0145 0.0147 Total 0.05875 Average 0.0146875 Thickness 0.029375 OD 0.337 0.0146 0.0148 0.0147 0.0143 Total 0.0584 Average 0.0146 Thickness 0.0292 OD 0.337 Overall Average 0.014605 Thickness 0.02921 OD 0.33721 Bushing 0.335
This is for 0.308. I use either a 0.306 or 0.3065 mandrel. I want 2 thousands tension so the average neck size is .337 and I run a .335 bushing. To determine this I measure the neck wall thickness at four points then average it and divide by 2 then add the diameter of my bullet, IE .308. So 0.02921 + 0.308 = -.33721. After all is said and done I get .3345 -.335 Neck OD and .3045-.305 Neck ID. When bullet is seated I measure a .337 ish neck OD
It is a spread sheet. All the math formulas punched in so I just enter the numbers etc.Wow! Is that a spreadsheet or all manual.
Nice work! Love spreadsheets.It is a spread sheet. All the math formulas punched in so I just enter the numbers etc.
Yeah my data log book is pretty much just a spread sheetNice work! Love spreadsheets.