TheCZKid
Silver $$ Contributor
For about a year been trying to decide if I wanted to create a 20 Practical AR upper, and finally found a deal on an upper on Armslist I couldn't pass up. What I got was a lightly used upper with a White Oak Armament 24" bull barrel, in an upper with hand-guard with BCG, etc. It also came with the Redding 223 B/FL Type S die with 233 and 226 bushings, 223 decapping rod and 204 decapping rod, plus the Redding Competition 204 seating die, all for $400, very happy with it.
I'm using LC brass, decapped and swaged, ultrasonic cleaned.
So to form the brass I use my Forster .223 FL die without the expander rod for first sizing. Seems to have good concentricity after that first sizing, under .002, normally .001 average.
Next I use the Redding S die with .233 bushing, and they stay concentric to .003 and normally .002 or less.
Last step is with the .226 bushing using the .204 rod expander ball, and only about 60% to 65% or so are .003 or under. The remainder are mostly .004 say 18%, .005 about 12%, and maybe 10% are over .006.
When I use the bushings I tighten the top screw part till it touches the bushing, then back off slightly, so if I shake the die the bushing is able to move a little, rattle slightly.
I'm going to run some tests with good loads I know my gun likes with say 5 rounds each using the .003 brass, 5 with the .004 brass, 5 with .005 and 5 with the worst offenders, see if the groups open up as specific concentricity gets worse.
But my concern is making MORE of my sized brass be in the .002 category, as I can get with my Forster dies and LC brass for my .223 AR's.
I'm using LC brass, decapped and swaged, ultrasonic cleaned.
So to form the brass I use my Forster .223 FL die without the expander rod for first sizing. Seems to have good concentricity after that first sizing, under .002, normally .001 average.
Next I use the Redding S die with .233 bushing, and they stay concentric to .003 and normally .002 or less.
Last step is with the .226 bushing using the .204 rod expander ball, and only about 60% to 65% or so are .003 or under. The remainder are mostly .004 say 18%, .005 about 12%, and maybe 10% are over .006.
When I use the bushings I tighten the top screw part till it touches the bushing, then back off slightly, so if I shake the die the bushing is able to move a little, rattle slightly.
I'm going to run some tests with good loads I know my gun likes with say 5 rounds each using the .003 brass, 5 with the .004 brass, 5 with .005 and 5 with the worst offenders, see if the groups open up as specific concentricity gets worse.
But my concern is making MORE of my sized brass be in the .002 category, as I can get with my Forster dies and LC brass for my .223 AR's.