skeeljc
Gold $$ Contributor
The thread started to derail here.Nothing wrong with the primers you got primer pocket issues. Are you seating them according to feel or depth? You can see the misfired ones are deeper than the fired one
The thread started to derail here.Nothing wrong with the primers you got primer pocket issues. Are you seating them according to feel or depth? You can see the misfired ones are deeper than the fired one
Thread completely derailed here.You cant kill primers soaked under water or oil for months
Sorry about that, I missed it. Post correctedAsked on Page 7
Why would you not relieve the shell holder instead? $80 die vs $4 shell holder.I sometimes have to grind down the bottoms of my RCBS FLS dies down to get them reach my shoulders at all. Also, I don't think I've ever had new brass in any caliber that was not slightly shorter than the HS dimension I considered optimal. As noted, it takes a firing or three before they are stretched out to where they are too long.
Why would you not relieve the shell holder instead? $80 die vs $4 shell holder.
Thanks.@Tokay444 the tooling philosophy taken should consider it as a method for bypassing stiffness issues with many presses. If a process is stable without it, then no worries. But, if a process is perturbed to the point where the low stiffness of a press load chain means that if you don’t bottom the die you get a poor result, then why not bottom the die.
I always teach to learn both ways and more importantly learn why and when to use each philosophy, then step back and let folks do what they like.
Time wasn't even a factor in my decision, and both chuck up just as easily.It literally takes me less than a minute to grind a die down. I don't see how grinding down the shell holder could be less effort. The die is a lot easier to hold than the SH is.
LOL, there is no "chucking" in my grinding.Time wasn't even a factor in my decision, and both chuck up just as easily.
Yes...that is the point I was making to the person that posted that...he would not have had to pull his bullets to find out what his problem was and would have to have driven the bullet out of the barrel.If the primers had gone off as normal, then NONE of the bullets would still be in the cases. Understanding this can save your eyes or teeth!
Grinding a die down removes the radius at the entrance.It literally takes me less than a minute to grind a die down. I don't see how grinding down the shell holder could be less effort. The die is a lot easier to hold than the SH is.
Yes, but since the case is tapered it does not care whether there is radius there or not, as best I can tell. But it is easy enough to hit it with a Dremel and create a taper, if you want.Grinding a die down removes the radius at the entrance.
Redding makes shell holders that push the case further into the die. The set includes six shell holders: 0, +.002", +.004", +.006", +.008", and +.010".
I know you got it, and my post was not directed at you, other than to reinforce your point. I should have made that clear.Yes...that is the point I was making to the person that posted that...he would not have had to pull his bullets to find out what his problem was and would have to have driven the bullet out of the barrel.
False.If the primers had gone off as normal, then NONE of the bullets would still be in the cases. Understanding this can save your eyes or teeth!