Interested in what is commonly done for 223, 308, 6 Dasher, 6.5 x47, 284 Win, 300 WSM. Not OD but thickness of the wall after turning.
If you don't need to turn down for a tight chamber, I turn mine too 0.013 -0.012 . Just take the high edges off. Just my two cents Tommy McInterested in what is commonly done for 223, 308, 6 Dasher, 6.5 x47, 284 Win, 300 WSM. Not OD but thickness of the wall after turning.
I use this Redding tool. It is a great tool and Will tell you neck wall thickness variations around the entire circumference of a neck. An advantage IMHO.The more the neck thickness is reduced the more the neck will expand when fired. This means the neck when sized will be reduce even more than normal. So food for thought, reloaders buy bushing dies to work the necks less but many neck turn and increase the amount the neck is worked in sizing.
Neck turning=less is more in a factory rifle
In a factory SAAMI chamber I would only skim turn the necks only taking the high spots down.
I would also recommend using the Redding neck thickness gauge to check neck thickness and for sorting cases. Also, note Redding recommends if the neck thickness varies .002 or more then size the necks .002 to .003 smaller and use the expander to set the final inside diameter.
Below the Redding neck thickness gauge, and with one turn of your wrist you will know the quality of your cases and the neck thickness variations.
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If you just “clean up” the necks for use in a factory chambered rifle, do you think the accuracy rewards would be evident?Turn it until you get 100% clean up. Lock that setting in, and write it down. Turn your entire batch that way. Better yet, never touch the turner/tool head again.
So long as you're not turning them "stupid thin" (i.e. .005) you'll be just fine.
If you just “clean up” the necks for use in a factory chambered rifle, do you think the accuracy rewards would be evident?
These are soft topics since none of us has the resources to sample very many guns and calibers. However, I was lucky enough to have some tight shooting factory REM 700s in my youth and I tested turned necks versus no-turn with a rig that was .30-06 and capable of going 3/4 MOA at 600 yards. I ran that gun in silhouette and put the work into making my brass better since our commercial brass in that era was garbage compared to now.If you just “clean up” the necks for use in a factory chambered rifle, do you think the accuracy rewards would be evident?
Have you noticed any difference in accuracy, since going to a more generous chamber?I don’t turn necks any longer, chambers are no-turn Lapua Blue Box.
But, when I did, all my 308 brass was turned to .0125, at that, it matched my chamber.
Way back, I did have a fairly tight necked .223 at one point, I can’t remember what the diameter was after turning, but I only had .002 total clearance, .001 per side. The reamer was borrowed from a guy that mainly shot bench rest and he sold me on the accuracy of tight necks.
Since most of my brass was LC and not something more consistent like Lapua, everything had to be turned or they wouldn’t feed. Turning all those 223 necks was a real pain, eventually I had that barrel rechambered into something a little more generous.
No, not really. I'm not a bench rest shooter and certainly those guys can wiggle out every single piece of accuracy from a round. I have no criticism of their ways or results, they are amazing.Have you noticed any difference in accuracy, since going to a more generous chamber?
One thing every one should keep in mind. Once you turn and fire that case. The Case wall thickness is going to shrink 0.0002 or 0.0003 as the case neck grows longer. (Lapua SRP/LRP 6.5CM Brass 2 Firings.) Some where some one said to turn your brass before the first firing.. Well,,, I say fire it at least 2 to 3 times before your ever True your necks. You will have to trim the case length on the third firing, and I suggest that you anneal after every firing. I shoot factory barrels and I True my case necks. In reality, in a factory barrel the thicker your brass is the better off you are. Provided that the case neck wall thickness is true, all the way around the case neck. After the 3rd firing, I check all of the case wall thickness in the groups, and hopefully I can turn them all to 0.0135 and then, I'm happy.I think it has less to do with the factory chamber/barrel than it does the variance in your brass thickness; if it wasn't consistent before turning, you'll probably see some improvement. As to if it will show, I think it will but there are certainly other things that matter way more (being in a stable node, having a good depth, etc.)
I'll also add that there are folks on here that shoot better than me that don't turn their necks. I just know when I started turning necks (on Lapua brass) my scores went up at 1k.
Just a guess, but the whole "no need to turn necks with a factory chamber" thing comes from folks who think you just need to turn for clearance reasons.
Just to clarify my earlier statement, when I said "cleaning up 100%", I meant taking a full cut across the neck, just removing as little as you have to in order to achieve that.
My 2c.![]()