Sounds like a bushing die is in order.Doesn't sound like you need a neck turner at all.
you read my mind.... !Doesn't sound like you need a neck turner at all.
A donut usually is caused by the normal process of brass flow. It goes a little like this: You fire a case and it expands some. You size it and push the shoulder down a few thousandths. Some of the brass that was the new expanded shoulder is now the base of the neck. Each reloading cycle, that brass buildup in the base of the neck gets more substantial. If your seated bullets are above that junction, you may never notice it. If you seat bullets deep enough in the case, then you will start to feel it both when you size brass, and when you seat bullets. This thread of mine may interest you: https://forum.accurateshooter.com/t...do-you-think-this-is-a-donut-forming.4028810/1- Does the expander ball form a donut? And will a forster FL die prevent that?
maybe I should go with a forster type FL die... seems Forster FL's are dried up.
2- I'll do what Even said, measure the neck after firing to see if my factory chamber neck area is generous....
Use a bushing die without an expander.Evan, thanks for your patience with me.
So you use a bushing FL die and utilize a expander to smooth out any possible perfections, got it.
Would donuts cause pressure spikes?
I usually stay away from the donut with short seating depths. But good to know.Use a bushing die without an expander.
Bushing will not size bottom portion of neck, you'll never know the doughnut even exists, use a smaller bushing than desired tension, then expander mandrel to proper tension/interference fit.
I missed your question, it was hidden among your rest and bags pics.why's that? make accuracy worse?
I just say that because you have factory rifles. There's no benefit in it when its sloppy factory chambering. You dont have tight necks where you have to to get brass to fit, and its really probably the opposite. You probably have plenty room around the neck in the chamber as is to where turned or not turned itd make no differenceyou read my mind.... !
It is thats why any rifle will benefit. Its about consistency in any place you can get it. Eliminating variables not ignoring them because you have a factory chamber. Its about making the most consistent ammoI was under the impression it was more about bullet neck tension and bullet release.
You apparently failed to read or comprehend my post #88 ............or you don't believe it valid.I was under the impression it was more about bullet neck tension and bullet release.
didn't say all about neck tension and bullet release said mostly so yes a formed case is needed. But not fully fire formed. Then you have extractions issues.You apparently failed to read or comprehend my post #88 ............or you don't believe it valid.
That's what you discerned from my post? Not at all what I said. I want to help but I feel I am wasting my time. You won't even say what rifles you hope to achieve 1/2" moa.didn't say all about neck tension and bullet release said mostly so yes a formed case is needed. But not fully fire formed. Then you have extractions issues.
Yep, I use FL bushing dies and start at 0.001 under my loaded round diameter for the bushing - so I use a 0.289 bushing if my loaded rounds measure 0.290. This is way lighter than I would recommend for a hunting rifle or factory gun and is used only for my BR rifles where the rounds are handled with care at all times. My hunting and factory rifles all use regular FL dies and I do not worry about these things with them.Evan, thanks for your patience with me.
So you use a bushing FL die and utilize a expander to smooth out any possible perfections, got it.
Would donuts cause pressure spikes?
Now think about this. We are talking about a loaded round, NOT a FIRED case. It will not allow the bullet to align with the bore....bullet enters rifling crooked.....goes down the barrel crooked.....enters open air in yaw (crooked)....arrives on target with greater group dispersion than if fired without the yaw induced.I just measured my fired case...... and it's .340 and SAMMI shows .3404.... I'm right there it appears. I guess That my factory chamber is as loose as you think.
If this were true, then an awful lot of us competitors could forgo custom actions, and simply build off untrued factory actions.Y
I disagree with LHSmith. A cartridge will always center in the chamber on the shoulder - any headspace is taken up when the firing pin pushes the cartridge forward until it stops. A "loose" fit of the cartridge to the chamber will not effect how it centers relative to the bore.
When I was first doing my research, I was very torn between the k and m unit and the 21st century. The I was very close to purchasing the k and m because of the pilot jack and the ability to add a dial indicator. These features made a world of sense to me. What ultimately won me over with the 21st century was the ability to easily transition the cutter to a motorized unit. I have since made that transition and do not regret it a bit, as said above neck turning is one of the least enjoyable tasks.
I agree with Evan. There are really only 2 reasons to neck turn, Both improve consistency. 1 reason is to correct variations in neck wall thickness and reduce the possibility of a doughnut. The other reason is if you have a tight necked chamber. For this reason, it is a matter of necessity. However, it does improve consistency to have necks turned to the same thickness.I've not seen neck turning with factory chambers make accuracy worse. It is a nice way to produce both lighter and more consistent neck tension with factory dies though. The drawback in a factory chamber is that neck clearance is usually quite generous, so if you turn your necks you may now have even more, say 0.010" or more of clearance which will work the brass more with each firing cycle and shorten its life.
If your goal is to shoot 0.5MOA consistently, Id recommend high quality, match type bullets first. If that doesn't do it, then I'd try high quality brass (if you aren't already: Lapua, Peterson, ADG, Alpha), then as the final step; I'd get a new barrel. Neck turning isn't something I would put in the "shrinks large groups" category. It's more in the "creates more consistency" category.