Grimstod
Machinist, Designer, and Shooter.
Then why are some OK, and others are not? Were all at the same OAL?
OAL jumps all over the place, almost .002-+ but that is because of inconsistent, well in this case a total lack of, neck tension.
Then why are some OK, and others are not? Were all at the same OAL?
By the way Grimstod, get a pin gauge to check your micrometer and calipers. I'm very familiar with the Berger 200 hybrids and my measuraments and experience don't jive with your mic's readings. It could also be that the 190's are different.
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I also anneal with a drill, I do it for 6 seconds. If you're annealing longer there will be less spring back so you will need a smaller (.325 or .324) bushing.
What thickness did you turn the necks to? These are unturned but still thin at .0105
Unturned necks can have as much as 2 thousands difference in thickness at different portions of the neck, but even 0.5 thousands will make a significant difference if your clearance is on the edge. This is basically the reason why people who use bushing dies have to turn their necks.What thickness did you turn the necks to? These are unturned but still thin at .0105
Lay a bullet next to one of those so we can see how far down in the case the bullet is. Specifically is the pressure ring below the neck/shoulder junction? I've had bullets where the pressure ring was big enough to open the neck up and I lost all neck tension...didn't seat the bullet as deep (where pressure ring was above the neck/shoulder junction) and it would hold.
Good luck, it's frustrating when something like this is going on.
If the expander ball is still on the decapping assembly. Take it off and retry. Once the brass has been fired the expander ball is not necessary since you are not over sizing the neck down so it needs to be re-expanded like with a standard die.So I am working on a wildcat. This is a .308x54r Improved. Shoulder moved forward about .190 and a 40d shoulder. Barrel is a 308 and I am shooting 308 Berger 190gr VLD bullets.
I Just got in a new bushing for my custom made Redding Type S Die. Its a titanium .327 bushing. Sized brass is measuring .328 neck and a loaded bullet is .3295 on my micrometer. Yet I still do not have enough neck tension. This brass has only been fired twice. I can actually push the bullet in with my finger and the air pressure makes it pop back out.
Below is a photo of two. One is how long I seat them and the second one I pushed in farther with my finger. Very light pressure to do it too.
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Here is how many I am loosing. the batch in the shell holder are good. The rest on the table are too loose.
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That is the thinnest unturned necks I ever heard of. Most necks are .015 plus on unturned brass. I too would like to see a bullet sitting alongside a seated one. From what I am seeing on the amount of bearing sticking out the case I can't believe the pressure ring is past the shoulder junction. MattWhat thickness did you turn the necks to? These are unturned but still thin at .0105
I have been struggling with this for over a year now. Never had problems with short 168r Bergers or 155r Hornady. All the things recommended, annealing, bushing size, expander ball removal etc. have been tried multiple times.
I will try to get you a photo Friday. My reloading stuff is at my fiancés place.That is the thinnest unturned necks I ever heard of. Most necks are .015 plus on unturned brass. I too would like to see a bullet sitting alongside a seated one. From what I am seeing on the amount of bearing sticking out the case I can't believe the pressure ring is past the shoulder junction. Matt
Custom reamer will be next. I think when this barrel is done I will get a proper reamer and sizing reamer. Might go the 7mm rout too. I think the case would be almost perfectly balanced. Not to much over bore and not to underpowered. Sorta like the 6.5x47Than start turning necks and use a smaller bushing . You get a custom reamer made , you go all out on a Mosin , good barrel , etc but you still don't turn necks . You worry about runout and try to straighten , still not turning necks .
If some of your cases are holding bullets , figure out why those are working , keep brass separate , # of loadings , weight , neck length and thickness .
Have you tried a Lee collet die ? Easy enough to adjust neck tension .
That is the thinnest unturned necks I ever heard of. Most necks are .015 plus on unturned brass. I too would like to see a bullet sitting alongside a seated one. From what I am seeing on the amount of bearing sticking out the case I can't believe the pressure ring is past the shoulder junction. Matt
As i said in post #11.. Hope this helps. Good luck.If the brass has not been neck turned, your problem is, some neck walls are thicker than others. The thin wall ones doesn't hold the bullets with enough neck tension. Use a smaller bushing, with light drag on the expander to get uniform neck tension. If brass has been neck turned, still just use a smaller bushing.