jlow said:
From what my understanding is brass with significant uneven wall thickness will banana after it is fired and this is why we cull new brass with this problem. Andrew says that his brass comming out of the chamber is 0.5-1 thousands and mikecr says the case is going to be as straight as they can be coming out of a smoking chamber. So how does this relates to the "banana" statement.
There is a big misconception out there that firing cases brings out problems.
It's not the
firing,, it's the
firing-sizing cycle that brings out the problems.
Now matter how much thickness variance there is, anywhere in cases, you don't bring it to runout until you size.
If you were to fire cases forever without ever sizing them, you would see no more runout than produced by your chamber(<1thou with my chambers). This is why I say cases are as straight as they will be out of a smoking chamber.
Also, firing alone does not harden brass. Hardening only comes from causing brass to repeatedly yield back & forth(firing-sizing cycle).
And finally, firing beyond needed to reach fully fireformed condition, does not move brass. Moving brass, means sizing it from one location to another. When you get donuts on the 5-6th reloading, it's because you're moving it there(aka FL sizing).
I've nearly tested these things with a fitted 26wssm. 30+ reloads, no neck sizing, or body sizing, other than shoulder bumps(35deg shoulder).
The necks were turned, and loaded runout has yet to reach 1thou off bullets(with the Sinclair). And seating forces as measured have not changed. No annealing or trimming will ever be needed.
Now the cases were initially culled to ~1/2thou variance in thickness mid necks, which is pretty good, and necks turned. But I am sure runout from this would still come out with any real sizing and no doubt it would grow with each sizing.
One other thing, don't think for a second that you can reduce runout with sizing. You can't. All you can do, the best you can, is add LESS runout with sizing(better & better with less sizing and eliminating issues).
In contrast, firing typically reduces runout -some. When Andrew sees .5-1thou of runout out of a chamber, that's the best from his brass at that point, unless there is some problem with his chamber. Sizing, from there, will only increase the runout.
jlow said:
I posted that I had problem with the Sinclair gauge - this is a fact. The problem is it would not give reproducible reading. I have had no problem with either the Hornady or NECO gauge.
The NECO can be setup like a V-block if you apply a stop to the casehead. Sinclair already has this. Hornady only provides greatly reduced readings instead of actual.
If you weren't getting consistent readings with the Sinclair v-block, and they improved with a NECO, the only real difference is the case stop, and this tells me your case heads aren't square -which is runout.
I don't have issues seeing my ammo as straight from the Sinclair. When I do, it's a matter of finding out what's wrong with my ammo(not the gage).