Either had 1. The wrong die 2. A body die 3. A bushing die with no bushing installed.
That’s where I am.Either had 1. The wrong die 2. A body die 3. A bushing die with no bushing installed.
I get a chuckle when anything gun related is made in a clearly anti gun state, in this case, MD. I always size my new brass for safety and consistency sakeIt was absolutely sold as new, and was new. Bright brass when looking down to the primer hole, that's one way to tell.
^ ^ ^ ^ thisI have always sized new brass. Always!
^ ^ ^ ^ this
Didn't know any one didn't.
This doesn't make sense. The only way this could happen is if the decapping/expander mandrel is the wrong size or the die is the wrong sizer or improperly set. Remove the decaying pin and size a case. the case neck ID should measure less than 0.221". Measure the expander ball dimension (widest part of the expander. It should be about o.222" or slightly less.Resizing with my RCBS full length small base die, after taking the primers out, did not work. The neck was still too large. Bullet still dropped into the case. I thought that might work too, but it did not. You always size new brass? Shouldn't the factory make them the correct size to begin with?
First - "small base" dies only squeeze the base of the brass (back by the rim) slightly smaller for functioning in some semi-autos without feeding issues. They certainly aren't going to do a thing about the issue you state - necks too large.I thought sizing the neck with an RCBS small base die would tighten them enough, but since they were 30 thousandths over in some, that did not work. Nothing I could do would work. They were new.
I don’t care what brass it is, (starline, Lapua, alpha, Peterson,….) I run a mandrel through it, chamfer it, and then neck size it. Primers, powder and projectiles are too expensive to waste.I bought 500 First Breech new primed brass. What a disaster. Primers literally falling out, and me, only noticing it after loading a hundred a fifty rounds of .223. They were just sliding out. Got my money back, Republic Ammunition has great customer service, but I was still out many, many, hours of work at first trying to make things right, and then just getting the primers out to use again. Threw the whole lot away. Then I bought NEW starline brass, primed it myself, and started to reload (.223) and lo and behold, the neck sizes were messed up on SIX of the first twenty I grabbed. Apparently, after researching it, bullets sliding into the primed and powered brass while trying to seat them is a common thing especially with .223 Starline brass. I never had this problem before. Some were over 30 thousandths too wide, so I get why it was happening. Got some money back from Midway so far, still waiting to hear from where I bought the rest and then Starline itself. What I want to know is, what brass does not have these kinds of problems? It's just not worth my time to try and fix NEW stuff. I would rather pay more, and just be able to load it. Any ideas? Thanks. I buy .308, .223, Grendel, and 6.5 Creedmoor mostly, just to let you know the sizes I'm looking for. I am almost thinking that once fired brass would be a better way to go nowadays. At least you know it worked!
I would have to second this, at some point with all the problems you have had with so many different manufacturers, so many different rifles, so many different cartridges, you have to look at the only common denominator.Someone needs to step back and look over their choices on what they are doing. You need to start all over. And find someone else that has been doing this for a while. Let them show you what you need to do.
Looking over your post and all the things you have run into and the guns you blew up, you need to step back before you kill yourself or someone else
I tend to agree with this, though it seems I have read more weird posts about true "defects" in Starline brass than any other that I can recall. Maybe because more entry level shooters tend to buy less expensive brass and have problems due to lack of solid reloading skills maybe? Or maybe there are problems with the brass?Six out of twenty on new Starline brass had the bullet falling into the powder. No way.
No disrespect intended, but you are in dire need of an experienced reloading mentor rather than trying to solve these issues online.I thought sizing the neck with an RCBS small base die would tighten them enough, but since they were 30 thousandths over in some, that did not work. Nothing I could do would work. They were new.
First - "small base" dies only squeeze the base of the brass (back by the rim) slightly smaller for functioning in some semi-autos without feeding issues. They certainly aren't going to do a thing about the issue you state - necks too large.