Reminds me of an "opposed-piston" diesel engine:I have a plastic headed mallet that has a head that is about 2" in diameter. Its head weighs about what the head of an inertial puller does with a loaded round in place. With one in each hand I snap them together in front of me, using a flick of the wrist to maximize head speeds. This works very well and saves me from having to find something to pound on.
Wankle????
Uh ... not so much.
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Obviously you gear heads know a lot more about this stuff than me. And I know it.Ya think?![]()
Ya think?
PS
I missed your "piston" earlier. Actually, a Wankel is a rotary pistonless design.
The rotary piston engine was common in WW I aircraft, the familiar examples being the Sopwith Camel and Fokker Dr.1 Triplane.
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TS3 engine that was used in UK Commer trucks.........not much else that I'm aware of.Wankle????
Known as a Radial engine of which can be single or multi row, usually a max of 9 cyl per bank/row.The rotary piston engine was common in WW I aircraft, the familiar examples being the Sopwith Camel and Fokker Dr.1 Triplane.
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TS3 engine that was used in UK Commer trucks.........not much else that I'm aware of.
Known as a Radial engine of which can be single or multi row, usually a max of 9 cyl per bank/row.
My exact happening sort of. I pulled my reloads, weighed the bullets, dumped the powder in the lawn for fertilizer and sold the never fired .308 Lapua primed brass. Got all my money back as I recall.Back on topic, I had a couple dozen 270 rounds that were not marked; in short I had no idea what the bullet weight or the charge was. Broke them down and after identifying the bullet and weight, I reloaded them with a mild charge that I can use for sighting in. In stead of wasting more than a box of shells I now have cartridges that I can put to use. The bullet puller has paid for itself several times over.
THIS THREAD HAS BEEN HIJACKED
Many (if not all) US WWII subs used Fairbanks-Morse diesel engines, which had two crankshafts and two opposed pistons per cylinder. The "valves" were in the cylinder walls. The engine was effectively two-stroke and relied on its supercharger to flush the burned gases from the cylinders on each stroke......Your animation brings to mind WWI & WWII submarines which I think had that design engine in some boats. Maybe there is a site member who knows of this?
I don't pull many either and i did buy a grip and pull. Only bad thing about the grip and pull is it really damages the bullet jacket. Pretty much wasting the bullet. The other side is I've broken a few impact pullers as well. They do keep the bullets in usable condition but if used often enough will break. Haven't tried a press style puller yet. It will be my next consideration. I do like the grip and pull for quick and easy use.
Thanks for the tip. I'll look into that possibility. Does not seem to be causing any other issues besides marring the bullets jacket. It's necessary to have alot of neck tension on some of my AR rounds, otherwise when feeding from the mags, many times the bullets push back into the cartridge.I know one thing for sure, if you can't pull the bullet without damaging it, you have way too much neck tension. It is my experience that any round with more than 30-50 lbs. of seating pressure don't do as well as those with less neck tension. That range of seating pressure allows me to easily disassemble rounds without damaging anything. YMMV.
I do pull quite a few bullets. During load development I usually load 50 of three separate charges really long and then adjust the seating depth, at the range, as I go with a Wilson seating die and a harbor press. Invariably one of those charges turns out better that the other two, so I end up focusing my testing on that charge. Consequently I am left with about 80-90 rounds that need to be disassembled. That's a 10-20 minute job for me using my Hornady collet puller. This process save me time because I only need to make one trip to the range.
Regards,
Joe
Don't apologize, you were the only person to adequately explain how the process works, I was doing everything ass backwards until you provided a detailed explanation of the process. I've decided after going through this obnoxious process that I'm not going to try to save $4-$5 dollars to get to the result I'm seeking. In short, the compromised brass is going to get thrown out and I'm going to return the RCBS dies and spend the extra $25.00 for the Redding dies. RCBS may be 1st in service, they do whatever it takes to make a customer happy; I'd rather spend the extra $$$, get the Redding Dies and not have to rely on service to work out the problems. Reloading for me is a hobby, a pastime that I want to enjoy. I don't reload to save $$$. I reload because I enjoy the exercise and strive to develop loads that are far superior to what I can buy off the shelf. I'm not going to spend afternoons reloading where it's an exercise in frustration. I want to enjoy what I'm doing. Even if I spend twice the money buying the best reloading equipment because at the end of the day, I'll still be saving money as opposed to buying custom ammunition.
I want to achieve the best possible accuracy I can for each of the half dozen rifles I shoot for mid-sized game animals. I don't want to pay someone else to develop loads I'm fully capable of developing on my own. The key difference id that I don't want to compromise on equipment to achieve the results I desire. At the end of the day, spending an extra 20-25% for purchasing foolproof equipment is criminal when you realize all of the time wasted attempting to correct compromised tools when a little bit of research would have enlightened you to the shortcomings you've exposed yourself to.
I guess what I'm trying to say is cry once, buy once, get the best and save yourself hours of frustration attempting to achieve results that are basic standards that no one should accept less than. I'm not going to achieve sub MOA at 3,200 feet per second with my 6.5-284 unless I get RL17 with 130grn Swift A Frames to work flawlessly together. It's much better than H4350, you just have to take the time to develop the loads. RL 17 is one of the most underrated powders available today, especially with high end and magnum loads.
Yet you're still here.4 pages dedicated to the use of a kinetic bullet puller was about 3 1/2 too many.