New to reloading and this may be a non-problem but it's leaving me confused at this point.
Using new Lapua 308 brass, Forster dies, and a Co-Ax press I'm getting up to five mils TIR runout on seated bullets, 175gr SMKs.
The neck runout is less than five tenths TIR, one mil TIR rarely. Outside chamfer is done with a Forster tool, inside with a Sinclair carbide VLD cutter in their handle applied while the case turns in a Lee trimmer lock stud mounted shellholder in a power screwdriver. Trimming is done with the Lee trimmer tool and the case lengths are very uniform and square, both within five tenths typically.
The Forster Benchrest Seater is properly adjusted, cleaned with Hoppe's #9, lightly lubed with machine oil, bullets are seated by hand as straight in the case mouth as possible, and the press is carefully operated using the optional short handle to improve feel.
Some rounds come out with very little runout but the bulk are at two to three mils with the occasional one at four or five mils, all TIR readings from a Forster Cartridge Inspector correctly set up.
I've discovered the Lapua brass, as new, has a wire edge around the outside of the case mouth, a smaller case mouth ID than neck ID, and the former can cause some scoring on the outside of the neck while the latter is exacerbated by passing the case through either the Forster full length or neck sizer.
Using a small hole gage and a micrometer that reads to one tenth the case mouth as sized is about 0.306" while the ID just a bit farther in can be as high as 0.308" or a bit more. This doesn't seem like a lot of bearing area for the bullet and removal with a kinetic puller is actually pretty easy.
Got a Lee Collet die yesterday, used some 400 grit wet and dry to deburr all the parts, re-oiled, re-assembled with NECO Moly-Slide on the collet bearing areas, verified the mandrel diameter at 0.305", and sized some already sized Lapua brass.
The step down in the case mouth diameter was mostly ironed out, the neck ID dropped to close to 0.3075", and there aren't any strongly visible collet marks on the OD of the neck. It seems like the bearing area is now larger and more uniform and bullets seated are harder to pull. The runout is pretty uniform at two mils or so TIR. The neck runout was still less than five tenths TIR after this reforming.
I'm still wondering if the bullet runout is indicative of a problem I'm not seeing or if all this is beside the point until the brass has been fireformed to the chamber. The rifle, fwiw, is a Rem700 that's been squared and trued with a Rock 5R barrel fitted and cut with an Obermeyer Match chamber.
Any help in understanding the characteristics of new Lapua brass and whether I'm just chasing a non-existent problem would be greatly appreciated.
TIA,
Pete
Using new Lapua 308 brass, Forster dies, and a Co-Ax press I'm getting up to five mils TIR runout on seated bullets, 175gr SMKs.
The neck runout is less than five tenths TIR, one mil TIR rarely. Outside chamfer is done with a Forster tool, inside with a Sinclair carbide VLD cutter in their handle applied while the case turns in a Lee trimmer lock stud mounted shellholder in a power screwdriver. Trimming is done with the Lee trimmer tool and the case lengths are very uniform and square, both within five tenths typically.
The Forster Benchrest Seater is properly adjusted, cleaned with Hoppe's #9, lightly lubed with machine oil, bullets are seated by hand as straight in the case mouth as possible, and the press is carefully operated using the optional short handle to improve feel.
Some rounds come out with very little runout but the bulk are at two to three mils with the occasional one at four or five mils, all TIR readings from a Forster Cartridge Inspector correctly set up.
I've discovered the Lapua brass, as new, has a wire edge around the outside of the case mouth, a smaller case mouth ID than neck ID, and the former can cause some scoring on the outside of the neck while the latter is exacerbated by passing the case through either the Forster full length or neck sizer.
Using a small hole gage and a micrometer that reads to one tenth the case mouth as sized is about 0.306" while the ID just a bit farther in can be as high as 0.308" or a bit more. This doesn't seem like a lot of bearing area for the bullet and removal with a kinetic puller is actually pretty easy.
Got a Lee Collet die yesterday, used some 400 grit wet and dry to deburr all the parts, re-oiled, re-assembled with NECO Moly-Slide on the collet bearing areas, verified the mandrel diameter at 0.305", and sized some already sized Lapua brass.
The step down in the case mouth diameter was mostly ironed out, the neck ID dropped to close to 0.3075", and there aren't any strongly visible collet marks on the OD of the neck. It seems like the bearing area is now larger and more uniform and bullets seated are harder to pull. The runout is pretty uniform at two mils or so TIR. The neck runout was still less than five tenths TIR after this reforming.
I'm still wondering if the bullet runout is indicative of a problem I'm not seeing or if all this is beside the point until the brass has been fireformed to the chamber. The rifle, fwiw, is a Rem700 that's been squared and trued with a Rock 5R barrel fitted and cut with an Obermeyer Match chamber.
Any help in understanding the characteristics of new Lapua brass and whether I'm just chasing a non-existent problem would be greatly appreciated.
TIA,
Pete