Reading the reloading forum articles about bullet run out seems to be a problem for
everyone and myself so I decided to make a bullet seating die with a different approach for repeatability.
Before I get started the seating dies the manufacture states there dies hold run out to close tolerance,
well I like to find one. I have a RCBS die the bullet hole bore is .005†loose and the center seating screw
is ¼â€sae and loose, I have Redding die the bullet hole bore is .027†loose and the seating screw loose,
I don’t understand the thinking on the design ideas for what they call close tolerance run out.
The loose tolerance on these dies for repeatability even the O ring trick is tuff, and when changing bullet
length you have to start over again checking run out.
This die is for .223 rem. cartridge using .224†bullet diameter.
Starting with the bottom end of the die the bore is machined the same angle as the cartridge body.
The bullet bore is .225†or .001†loose The ram on the loading press is set all the way up,
screw the die down with a light touch on the cartridge so the when the correct bullet seating depth
is set with the top seating screw the cartridge is straight inline with the bullet bore. The cartridge neck
stops 1/16†below the bullet bore so the small amount of bullet diameter sticking out is still in the bullet bore
to help alignment.
Working on the top end of the die the threads is ½†sae did not use a tap, chased the threads to make sure
no misalignment. At the bottom of the threads in the die bored a .375†dia. hole 7/8†long to the top of the
bullet bore. The seating screw below the threads is machine .374†dia..001†loose and 7/8†long to fit the die
bore .375†the threads now are not used for centering for bullet alignment. The end of the seating screw shaft
is machine to the bullet ogive radius for more contact and alignment, a straight angle cut will have a small edge
contact.
Now the results,
New Lapua brass neck run out .000†/ 25 rounds .000†bullet run out.
PMC brass 1x fired and re-sized, neck run out .000â€-.001" / 40 rounds .000â€-.001†bullet run out.
Tried some .002â€-.003†neck run out / .002â€-.004†bullet run out.
My theory on this die design is what you put in is what you get out and repeats.
I think the die bottom end angle might not be that critical, but bullet bore size and the top end of the die
bore for the seating screw machine fit is the answer for repeating.
This was not a 5 minute job if you know somebody with a lathe you can drill the top of a seating die out
with carbide drill and press in an insert and machine to what I did to the top end and make a seating screw
to match not as much time consuming if you have to pay for it. Machine work is not cheap.
Myself I don’t work for $1.00 day and 2 fish heads like China pays.
No expert on this stuff just something I wanted to tried, don’t shoot competition, don’t know a competition shooter
maybe this is how they make custom seating dies. This could be old news but it’s working for me.
everyone and myself so I decided to make a bullet seating die with a different approach for repeatability.
Before I get started the seating dies the manufacture states there dies hold run out to close tolerance,
well I like to find one. I have a RCBS die the bullet hole bore is .005†loose and the center seating screw
is ¼â€sae and loose, I have Redding die the bullet hole bore is .027†loose and the seating screw loose,
I don’t understand the thinking on the design ideas for what they call close tolerance run out.
The loose tolerance on these dies for repeatability even the O ring trick is tuff, and when changing bullet
length you have to start over again checking run out.
This die is for .223 rem. cartridge using .224†bullet diameter.
Starting with the bottom end of the die the bore is machined the same angle as the cartridge body.
The bullet bore is .225†or .001†loose The ram on the loading press is set all the way up,
screw the die down with a light touch on the cartridge so the when the correct bullet seating depth
is set with the top seating screw the cartridge is straight inline with the bullet bore. The cartridge neck
stops 1/16†below the bullet bore so the small amount of bullet diameter sticking out is still in the bullet bore
to help alignment.
Working on the top end of the die the threads is ½†sae did not use a tap, chased the threads to make sure
no misalignment. At the bottom of the threads in the die bored a .375†dia. hole 7/8†long to the top of the
bullet bore. The seating screw below the threads is machine .374†dia..001†loose and 7/8†long to fit the die
bore .375†the threads now are not used for centering for bullet alignment. The end of the seating screw shaft
is machine to the bullet ogive radius for more contact and alignment, a straight angle cut will have a small edge
contact.
Now the results,
New Lapua brass neck run out .000†/ 25 rounds .000†bullet run out.
PMC brass 1x fired and re-sized, neck run out .000â€-.001" / 40 rounds .000â€-.001†bullet run out.
Tried some .002â€-.003†neck run out / .002â€-.004†bullet run out.
My theory on this die design is what you put in is what you get out and repeats.
I think the die bottom end angle might not be that critical, but bullet bore size and the top end of the die
bore for the seating screw machine fit is the answer for repeating.
This was not a 5 minute job if you know somebody with a lathe you can drill the top of a seating die out
with carbide drill and press in an insert and machine to what I did to the top end and make a seating screw
to match not as much time consuming if you have to pay for it. Machine work is not cheap.
Myself I don’t work for $1.00 day and 2 fish heads like China pays.
No expert on this stuff just something I wanted to tried, don’t shoot competition, don’t know a competition shooter
maybe this is how they make custom seating dies. This could be old news but it’s working for me.