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I bought 1 bushing assuming I knew what I wanted. Later I bought 3 more to bracket. Ended up using one size all the time. I would concider selling 3 cheap. I bought the plain steel bushings. Never saw any admantage to TiN coated ones. Steel bushings much cheaper. They are for 6mm.I need some clarification…
I have a 7rem mag and when a bullet is seated, it measures .310”. If I want .003” of neck tension, would I select the .307” bushing or the .304” bushing because .003”x 2 (circumference) is .006” minus .310”? Hope that makes sense
Weather is finally getting getting better, but sure appreciative of the rain. Filling tanks for cattle and game is so important.It's diameter, so the .307",
How is the weather down there, is the rain over for you folks?
Also, here is a better answer
Neck Bushing Sizing
If you change brass lots or don't get your necks turned to the same exact thickness, you may want those bushings back..... Those thoughts are what keep me from getting rid of the horde of bushings I have - all idle bushings for the same reason as you encountered. You know a lot of people end up with a lot of bushings when they make plastic cases to hold dozens of them Ha!. (They are nice to have)I bought 1 bushing assuming I knew what I wanted. Later I bought 3 more to bracket. Ended up using one size all the time. I would concider selling 3 cheap. I bought the plain steel bushings. Never saw any admantage to TiN coated ones. Steel bushings much cheaper. They are for 6mm.
I'm confused! What size bushing are you using? If 20 will not seat firmly why are you pulling the other 80? Is the 100 brass all the same? Same brand, same number of firings? Same cleaning and prep?Weather is finally getting getting better, but sure appreciative of the rain. Filling tanks for cattle and game is so important.
I think I’m getting spring back because I FL sized about 100 peices at the same time, same die and bushing and 20 of them won’t seat a bullet firmly. Guess I’ll pull all 80 bullets and resize again so they’re all the same?
Currently using .309. The problem is out of 100, 80 of them will hold the bullet and 20!of them won’t hold a bullet. My concern is that I need to pull all the loaded ones and resize everything the same with .307 so they are all the same?Here is some math using numbers provided. .310 loaded round at the neck. Subtract bullet diameter of .284 = .026 total brass thickness.
.307 bushing minus brass thickness of .026 = .281 inside diameter of sized brass. Ignoring brass spring back, consistency of annealing, off sized bushing, etc., this should give you .003 of concentricity fit.
Help us understand “won’t seat a bullet firmly.” Pull the other 80?
What size bushing are you using now? What is the outside diameter of a neck on a sized case? Can you measure the loaded neck diameter of several bullets to confirm the .310?
Edited: My guess is that you are currently using a .309 or .310 bushing. Close?
But they will not be all the same. The 20 will be correct and the 80 will be to tight.Currently using .309. The problem is out of 100, 80 of them will hold the bullet and 20!of them won’t hold a bullet. My concern is that I need to pull all the loaded ones and resize everything the same with .307 so they are all the same?
I pulled the decapping/expander.Do you have the expander/decapping rod in the die? If so, what diameter is the expander. It's usually -0.002 from bullet diameter.
If 20% of his brass won't hold a bullet - that is not "correct" - as they need to be able to hold the bullet. While the other 80 might be "tight" relative to those that are "loose" in the neck - using the tighter bushing is the only option unless he turns necks. Even then, he will still need to go with a tighter bushingBut they will not be all the same. The 20 will be correct and the 80 will be to tight.