Is it just inevitable that an expander mandrel is going to get "scratched up" or actually covered w/ brass streaks/buildup as its used? Mine is a 21st Century caliber-specific and I'm using it on untumbled virgin Lapua brass.
At first, I thought it was because I was chamfering/deburring the brass before running it through the bushing sizer and then the expander die (again - new brass, so no trimming yet). But realizing I needed to ultimately switch that order, I've only sized & expanded this brand new batch of brass so far, and I'm just unsure because of how "rough" the expander mandrel is afterwards. (And it was silky smooth to start with.) I know all of that "roughness" has to also be present now on the inside of the necks, too, right?
Or does virgin brass need to be chamfered/deburred before the expanding step to cut down on the rough edges that lead to build-up on the mandrel?... (Although it didn't "feel" any different working the Forster Co-ax up and down w/ the expander die this go-round... i.e. the feel of expanding right-out-of-the-box brass vs. new brass that has been chamfered/deburred.)
All of that being said, this combo of sizing, expanding the virgin Lapua 284 Win, etc. is working very well for me. After a long process of load development & testing, I shot my first-ever competition 2 weeks ago (a 3x600) and shot 199-12x, 199-11x, and 199-8x. So I definitely can't complain about the results, but I just wondering about all the small details that can eventually add up.
Thanks,
Luke
At first, I thought it was because I was chamfering/deburring the brass before running it through the bushing sizer and then the expander die (again - new brass, so no trimming yet). But realizing I needed to ultimately switch that order, I've only sized & expanded this brand new batch of brass so far, and I'm just unsure because of how "rough" the expander mandrel is afterwards. (And it was silky smooth to start with.) I know all of that "roughness" has to also be present now on the inside of the necks, too, right?
Or does virgin brass need to be chamfered/deburred before the expanding step to cut down on the rough edges that lead to build-up on the mandrel?... (Although it didn't "feel" any different working the Forster Co-ax up and down w/ the expander die this go-round... i.e. the feel of expanding right-out-of-the-box brass vs. new brass that has been chamfered/deburred.)
All of that being said, this combo of sizing, expanding the virgin Lapua 284 Win, etc. is working very well for me. After a long process of load development & testing, I shot my first-ever competition 2 weeks ago (a 3x600) and shot 199-12x, 199-11x, and 199-8x. So I definitely can't complain about the results, but I just wondering about all the small details that can eventually add up.
Thanks,
Luke