1) yes. I think it evens out velocity giving lower es/sd
2) never. I loose too much brass with seating bullets that go wonky that i am never going to get a lot of reloads on them. Plus i have no annealer
David
Thanks for your reply. I'll try some with and without the FCD, see if it makes a difference.
I did find out something last night... I assumed the Hornady bullet seating die, with the bullet aligning collar, was seating my bullets pretty concentric.
I checked my newly loaded neck turned cases and loads I made last night with my RCBS Case Master. Turns out the seating die has been bending my cases at the neck to one side, about .008, the tip of the bullet wobbles around in a circle.
The brass before seating was .001 on average. I was amazed! I checked my non-turned test loads I prepared earlier, and all those are also bent too, off concentricity at the neck forward by about .008.
So I ordered the Redding Competition Seating die, MidwayUSA $148, dang!
$$ That might be one big issue for the inaccurate and inconsistent of my test load results so far.
On #2, I have annealed other brass using the Hornady Anneal Kit #041220, they're like a socket on the end of a 6-sided bit which fits a drill motor, and you just spin the brass over a torch, using Tempilaq 475 degree temperature indicating liquid, to find correct distance from and time over the flame. I have not tried it on my 17 Hornet brass yet, might need a smaller diameter bit. Here's the kit, and I use a propane torch.
