jds holler
Gold $$ Contributor
I just scored my second batch of a hundred 7 BR brass, locally, for 35 bucks. (Remington brand). I think that's a pretty smoking deal, especially since almost no one around this neck of the woods even knows what a BR rifle or brass even is.
I'm not an Okie, but I was taught by some of the best. To get this stuff down to 22 BR, I had to use an intermediate step from 7mm to 6mm. To do that, without a bushing die -- (yeah, I know, I'm a tight wad), I took an old .243 neck sizing die, and cut it off at a point that allows me to down-size the neck of the case. I stop just before the shoulder deforms from the 20 degree angle of the .243 die.
After that step, I final size the case in my full length Redding 22 BR die.
Then in a separate step, expand the neck with the .223 expander set low.
Next, trim to length, and chamfer the mouths -- again.
The necks now fit the mandrel on my neck lathe, and I turn them to .011". My chamber neck dimension is .248", and my loaded round neck measures .246". This seems to be working pretty well.
The shoulders look a little funky until after one fire-form shot. The last batch I did, the fire-formers grouped sub MOA, and were plenty good for squirrel shooters. The second load that I grouped with these brass went pretty well, without much experimenting, giving some .5" groups with powder loads that I had worked up with Lapua brass.
Overall, I'm pretty happy with these brass, although I've got a lot of time invested in them before I'm done.
I think it's about time to invest in a bushing die, for this process, and to better size my necks without an expander.
Any thoughts?? jd
I'm not an Okie, but I was taught by some of the best. To get this stuff down to 22 BR, I had to use an intermediate step from 7mm to 6mm. To do that, without a bushing die -- (yeah, I know, I'm a tight wad), I took an old .243 neck sizing die, and cut it off at a point that allows me to down-size the neck of the case. I stop just before the shoulder deforms from the 20 degree angle of the .243 die.
After that step, I final size the case in my full length Redding 22 BR die.
Then in a separate step, expand the neck with the .223 expander set low.
Next, trim to length, and chamfer the mouths -- again.
The necks now fit the mandrel on my neck lathe, and I turn them to .011". My chamber neck dimension is .248", and my loaded round neck measures .246". This seems to be working pretty well.
The shoulders look a little funky until after one fire-form shot. The last batch I did, the fire-formers grouped sub MOA, and were plenty good for squirrel shooters. The second load that I grouped with these brass went pretty well, without much experimenting, giving some .5" groups with powder loads that I had worked up with Lapua brass.
Overall, I'm pretty happy with these brass, although I've got a lot of time invested in them before I'm done.
I think it's about time to invest in a bushing die, for this process, and to better size my necks without an expander.
Any thoughts?? jd