bozo699
Gold $$ Contributor
Hey Guy's,
I have been having trouble for quite sometime with runout after resizing with my Redding bushing dies, the regular dies arn't bad but if I have less than .001 runout on a fired case I sometimes have .003- .007 runout after sizing?? I bought a new Redding T7 turret press a few months back and noticed the problem since the new press. I set up a dial indicator on the T7 and found it had .003 tip to the turret when much of any pressure was applied, so I figured that was the problem so I bought a RCBS RockChucker, still the problem persisted? I have for years when seating my bullets, seat them 1/2 way then rotate 180* then finish seating to reduce runout, so I tried it when resizing my cases and it seemed to help quite a bit. I suppose you guys have done that for years do any of you do this? and do you have any other tricks to reduce n/k runout?
Any help will be appreciated and put to good use.
Wayne.
I have been having trouble for quite sometime with runout after resizing with my Redding bushing dies, the regular dies arn't bad but if I have less than .001 runout on a fired case I sometimes have .003- .007 runout after sizing?? I bought a new Redding T7 turret press a few months back and noticed the problem since the new press. I set up a dial indicator on the T7 and found it had .003 tip to the turret when much of any pressure was applied, so I figured that was the problem so I bought a RCBS RockChucker, still the problem persisted? I have for years when seating my bullets, seat them 1/2 way then rotate 180* then finish seating to reduce runout, so I tried it when resizing my cases and it seemed to help quite a bit. I suppose you guys have done that for years do any of you do this? and do you have any other tricks to reduce n/k runout?
Any help will be appreciated and put to good use.
Wayne.