Non-issue. Most brass migration is a result of the sizing operation and proper die or bushing selection...not pressure. Work the brass minimally and have ample clearance...and forget about it. If you're looking to get 50 firings from your brass, or something fairly extreme...then monitor it over time but your concern is not pressure but proper die selection.Body/boattail junction is at neck/shoulder junction or just slightly above...no donut problems. Just figure that even @ 1.5-2 thou shoulder setback, the pressure to expand and stretch case to fill chamber would result in brass flow into the neck area...rsbhunter
Maybe for the first time I must disagree. If you use a tenth Mic on your loaded rounds you will see them fatten up. About every 5 th firing I run the knife back over them. Some you see nothing, some you see dust, every once in a while you say, Wow. I run a tight neck tight so I stay on top of it. I feel it pays off. Remember it's the little things plus the flags that help you be sucessful.Non-issue. Most brass migration is a result of the sizing operation and proper die or bushing selection...not pressure. Work the brass minimally and have ample clearance...and forget about it. If you're looking to get 50 firings from your brass, or something fairly extreme...then monitor it over time but your concern is not pressure but proper die selection.
Couldn't agree more..the bushings will push brass the opposite direction towards the donut. I quit using bushings for this very reason!Maybe for the first time I must disagree. If you use a tenth Mic on your loaded rounds you will see them fatten up. About every 5 th firing I run the knife back over them. Some you see nothing, some you see dust, every once in a while you say, Wow. I run a tight neck tight so I stay on top of it. I feel it pays off. Remember it's the little things plus the flags that help you be sucessful.
Will your mic measure ten thousandths or 100 thousandths? If it only goes to .001...you won't understand.I turn all necks, and neck size only with bushings. There is never any donut building for me.
Brass does not 'flow' into necks. It moves per sizing, thick towards thin.
And neck bushings do not cause donuts.
It's FL sizing that rolls brass thickness up cases (always up), eventually into neck-shoulder junction, and leading to trimming as well.
No matter how many reload cycles, I don't have to trim (beyond initial, or ever).
4 decimal points. .0001 Don't get technical, I am not a machinest, lol. I won't argue why but I will tell you....necks thicken. When you talk about pressure don't neglect intense heat. Does that enter in. I don't know....But how can it not? I do know in this sport in my opinion there are a lot of 'facts' that are accepted but not verified. I do know thin necks are out of favor so there are lots of reasons/excuses to not 'need' them. I just know what I see and what works for me. I am willing to do the work if I think it helps me. Bottom line....he who reads the flags best.....wins. I do not like digital mics..Will your mic measure ten thousandths or 100 thousandths? If it only goes to .001...you won't understand.
You should watch the (edited) Jack Neary interview cortina did on BR brass prepWas wondering if in my 6 Dasher cases need to be neck turned again after x number of firings ? I only skim necks anyway to about 70% - 80% clean up. I'm not stomping on the loads, 32.0 gr Varget with 105s...I do trim, anneal, brush each time.....rsbhunter
Link Please ?You should watch the speedy interview cortina did on BR brass prep
Interesting and revealing.
CorrectionLink Please ?
Oh yea I have seen this one. Great video no doubt.Correction
It was with Jack Neary
The stuff on neck turning is pure gold
Erik does a good job relating F class requirements and that can be applied to field use obviously.
I wish you wouldn't have posted that. Lol....I have been preaching this for a year or better. So many big names argue too...why do you think Speedys pumpkin patch is in excess of probably 50 by now? Every Pumpkin that comes up for sale, he buys!Oh yea I have seen this one. Great video no doubt.
Oh yea, I'm pretty sure Jack has been around the block enough times that he knows a few things that work and some that don't. He also does a neat powder/seating depth combo test in another video that I plan to try once I get my 6PPC in hand.Correction
It was with Jack Neary
The stuff on neck turning is pure gold
Erik does a good job relating F class requirements and that can be applied to field use obviously.
Absolutely!Oh yea, I'm pretty sure Jack has been around the block enough times that he knows a few things that work and some that don't. He also does a neat powder/seating depth combo test in another video that I plan to try once I get my 6PPC in hand.
+1^^^ My observations mirror what JEFF is seeing. I start measuring a few after the third firing and by the 4th or 5th firing it's time for a trim to length and re-turn usually. JME. WDMaybe for the first time I must disagree. If you use a tenth Mic on your loaded rounds you will see them fatten up. About every 5 th firing I run the knife back over them. Some you see nothing, some you see dust, every once in a while you say, Wow. I run a tight neck tight so I stay on top of it. I feel it pays off. Remember it's the little things plus the flags that help you be sucessful.