P1ZombieKiller
Silver $$ Contributor
Same^^^.....but Wes taught me that when I first started making 30 br brassI normally kiss the shoulders with the cutter when turning my 30BR cases.
I have a 30 degree and a 40 degree on my 30 cutters (I run 3 different 30 cal cutters).Does everyone use a 30° cutter? Someone suggested once to use a 35° cutter to make the transition on the shoulder nicer. Anyone actually doing this?
This is why I think turning on an IDOD is better, its indexed off the shoulder. There for no matter lot to lot variations every case turns the same. Imagine if you had some cases with shorter than normal length necks and you rapidly turned on your old school mandrel turner and cut to deep into the shoulder and didn't really think about how much you cut off, Fast forward to a match and boom you blow the neck loose from the shoulder, now you have to deal with a stuck neck in your chamber... don't say it can't happen because I've seen it first hand with a very experienced bench rest shooter. He had a full box of cases that this happened to and pretty much after blowing 4 necks off in one match he packed up and drove 300 miles home. I can turn cases all day several hundred at a time and every single case will have just a touch on the shoulder NO MATTER how short or long the necks are...No need. I noticed this latest lot# seemed to be a little longer than the previous lots.
My cutter indexes off the end of the case neck, so longer neck, less cutting into the shoulder.
And this got me thinking, so I wanted to ask others what they do. I had changed the mandrel to allow a little bit more cutting distance.
This was more of a "wonder what others do" type of thing. Its cold here and I am bored, so the mind is going a little crazy.
Its not often here in Texas that we get iced in.
Size and trim and mandrel before turning if you index off case length or neck.This is why I think turning on an IDOD is better, its indexed off the shoulder. There for no matter lot to lot variations every case turns the same. Imagine if you had some cases with shorter than normal length necks and you rapidly turned on your old school mandrel turner and cut to deep into the shoulder and didn't really think about how much you cut off, Fast forward to a match and boom you blow the neck loose from the shoulder, now you have to deal with a stuck neck in your chamber... don't say it can't happen because I've seen it first hand with a very experienced bench rest shooter. He had a full box of cases that this happened to and pretty much after blowing 4 necks off in one match he packed up and drove 300 miles home. I can turn cases all day several hundred at a time and every single case will have just a touch on the shoulder NO MATTER how short or long the necks are...
My results are fine. Every single one in the picture is exactly the same. This is where I prefer to turn the necks to on my 30's. Just a good kiss of the shoulder.I think you’ll see better results if you trim all your cases to the same length before you cut the necks down.