Sheepdog, no, the ram does not go to the top, stop and then change directions. The linkage jams up and pushes the ram to the rear at the bottom. All a reloader has to do to understand this is to back away from the key board and then crawl under the bench and watch the Rock Chucker in operation. There are reloaders that claim they have precision tools, some even claim they have read the instructions, some have typed out miles and miles of gigs covering run-put; problem, not one of them has ever figured a way to measure the amount of cam over with a dial indicator. I do not want a dial indicator setting on top of my RCBS ram when it goes to the top because I am the only reloader that knows there is a good chance I could render a dial indicator scrap because; before the ram stops and then changes directions, it kicks forward at the top because of the linkage at the bottom of the press goes into a lock up bind and kicks the ram back at the bottom. I know I have been reported to RCBS as being the one that claims the Rock Chucker does not cam over. In the beginning RCBS claimed the Rock Chucker was not a cam over press, I still have instructions for RCBS presses, and then there is all of that confusions about 'bump'. In the old days a cam over press was described as a 'bump' press because it bumped once on the way up and again 'once' on the way down. And now? We have reloaders that are so good at 'it' they can bump the shoulder back .002" and I say it is impossible to move the shoulder back or bump the should back with a die that has bull length case body support.
And then? In the 1930s a company made pliers, they patented them as being leaver lock pliers. Very early in my life I had the opportunity to work in the oil field, I had a friend that had to have a plate installed, seems he was using some equipment that was leaver lock, the leaver should have been tied off with a chain loop but wasn't. When the leaver came loose it shattered his skull.
F. Guffey