Cory porter
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		I am going to start shooting 223 at a few matches. What fl bushing dies are you guys using
				
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For the most part I agree with the comments above, Redding is what I mostly use as well. But you might also consider Whidden custom dies. They can be made according to your fired brass or to your reamer spec. Best to use your fired brass.I am going to start shooting 223 at a few matches. What fl bushing dies are you guys using
The Lee offers a lot of die for the money. My experience is that they are good but if you want to play with neck tension, there are better options.You guys are gonna laugh and I'm certain make fun of me, but use plain old Lee FL dies, use them for my service rifle, use them for my match rifle.......
Worry less about your equipment , you need trigger time. Matches aren't won on the reloading bench, matches are won on the line by the guys who know how to shoot!
Aaron
Amen - Amen - Amen - The most significant variable is the shooter - When I shot competitive precision pistol, I saw it a lot.You guys are gonna laugh and I'm certain make fun of me, but use plain old Lee FL dies, use them for my service rifle, use them for my match rifle.......
Worry less about your equipment , you need trigger time. Matches aren't won on the reloading bench, matches are won on the line by the guys who know how to shoot!
Aaron
Forgive my ignorance, does the mandrel go in before the decaping pin or do you have to switch from either or? Like the looks of that die though. Would be cool if it decapped, sized and ran a mandrel all at once. Not sure if thats possible though.Redding is what I have used in the past. I'm just a weekend shooter but I'm starting to really like the Mighty Armory Gold Match resizing die with the built in mandrel expander. Seating pressure feels more consistent
It is not a bushing die but the mandrel is handling neck tension anyway.
It can do it all at once or you can change out the tip and just have it size and mandrel.Forgive my ignorance, does the mandrel go in before the decaping pin or do you have to switch from either or? Like the looks of that die though. Would be cool if it decapped, sized and ran a mandrel all at once. Not sure if thats possible though.
What would be the benefits of doing it in two stages?It can do it all at once or you can change out the tip and just have it size and mandrel.
Worry less about your equipment , you need trigger time. Matches aren't won on the reloading bench, matches are won on the line by the guys who know how to shoot!
Aaron
I am a CMP & NRA high power guy....admittedly I know nothing about Fclass, how ever marksmanship fundamentals are kinda universal, nothing replaces practice/ trigger timeAdvice is put forth thru the lens of ones own experiences, so I can appreciate this point if it is in a certain context.
I do not agree with it if you are a competitive shooter, especially F Class where the bull is small, the distances long and the competitors competent. (Or other such precision sports.)
Certainly a balance is always required and gear alone does not make a great shooter in any variation of the sport, but as the quality of your competitive peers rises, so must everything else.
In F Class, I can say that when I cut corners on the bench I fade in the pack. When I do it all on the bench I rise in the pack. Sooner or later corner cutting will cost you points.
I am going to start shooting 223 at a few matches.
 

