A doughnut still forms? Have you experienced this first hand?The BRX forms donuts just like many other cartridges. There is no magic. Seat ur bullets above the shoulder neck junction.
When using a shorter neck I am thinking that I will need to use the entire neck for gripping the bullet. BRX has a .200 NK length correct?No. This means your throat is not proper for your bullet. With this short neck you should seat a bullet with the pressure ring halfway down the neck. Then using a throating reamer adjust until a bullet just receives a tiny mark from the lands engaging. This allows you plenty of room to tune seating depth and donuts are not an issue.
When sizing the neck, material is displaced both radially inward and axially. The material that moves axially towards the neck/shoulder junction can not flow around the angled transition into the shoulder and forms the doughnut.What would cause a doughnut when the neck and shoulder are the same thickness?
I have no idea if this is factual but it sounds good, lol. Thanks for the explanation .When sizing the neck, material is displaced both radially inward and axially. The material that moves axially towards the neck/shoulder junction can not flow around the angled transition into the shoulder and forms the doughnut.
25+ years working with a manufacturing process called “push pointing” taught me it is real.I have no idea if this is factual but it sounds good, lol. Thanks for the explanation .
Hey, I believe you. It sounds way to good to be made up. Thanks for infoming a low tech guy. I can't wait to lay this on someone when a discussion on donuts comes up. But, could you repeat it one more time for me speaking s l o w l y .25+ years working with a manufacturing process called “push pointing” taught me it is real.
Thanks.My BRX experience is based on two different rifles and four barrels on a single rifle.
When u fire the cartridge brass flows forward. It stretches, at a minimum, the amount of ur shoulder set back. That brass heads to the shoulder/ neck junction. If u purchase some precision pins in the diameter of ur final neck ID, after sizing slide the appropriate pin into the neck. After three or four firings, that pin will stop at the bottom of ur neck. That is the donut forming.
Now I am not loading from a magazine. Ur issue will be to select the proper free bore and neck tension to maintain ur seated depth.
What shooting discipline are u chambering for? Is a BRX the best choice for a magazine fed application? Do u know someone with a magazine feed rifle chambered in BRX and how does the rifle feed? These are questions I would want answered before I got to making a chambering decision.
