• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Erik Cortina's YouTube Channel

More thinking, usually a problem...... :)

Erik,

What about the mechanically centered Tony Boyer type method? Is that still valid? I've been out of this for a number of years.

Rich
 
richinva said:
More thinking, usually a problem...... :)

Erik,

What about the mechanically centered Tony Boyer type method? Is that still valid? I've been out of this for a number of years.

Rich

That issue with that is that you do not know at a simple glance if you are centered or not. The only thing you are doing by zeroing the scope at the bottom is that it will allow you to use it like a micrometer and know where you are at always.
 
Yep, I think I'd rather have it like your method. Should also work with different loads thru the same barrel, after each zero is obtained. Cool, thanks.
 
richinva said:
Yep, I think I'd rather have it like your method. Should also work with different loads thru the same barrel, after each zero is obtained. Cool, thanks.

Yes. Each load would have it's on zero for each yardage such as:
Load A:
100 yards = 17 MOA
300 yards = 21 MOA, etc.

Load B:
100 yards = 15 MOA
300 yards = 18 MOA, etc.
 
I just bought a grizzly mini lathe and I love mine .
I made a couple of mandrels and now plan on doing some of Eric's
Tricks on the new lathe. What fun😜.
It really make things easy.
 
Erik,

This might be off-topic but have you had issues with your co-ax and Redding dies not being able to bump the shoulder back far enough? Trying to resize some .25-06 brass and I can't move the shoulder back because the die is bottoming hard against the sliders? They worked fine on my old press. Will I need to have some material ground off them to get them to work correctly?
 
mslman said:
Erik,

This might be off-topic but have you had issues with your co-ax and Redding dies not being able to bump the shoulder back far enough? Trying to resize some .25-06 brass and I can't move the shoulder back because the die is bottoming hard against the sliders? They worked fine on my old press. Will I need to have some material ground off them to get them to work correctly?

No issues for me. Take a little off the bottom of the die.
 
Please help support this new long range club so that they can grow it to be one of the best in the Nation!

[youtube]http://youtu.be/3Cuu3_At7U0[/youtube]
 
eric, your videos are very informative. was thinking about getting a grizzly micro lathe for necking turning, deburring, primer pocket uniforming, etc. do think it will work? thanks allen
 
wheelgun7360 said:
eric, your videos are very informative. was thinking about getting a grizzly micro lathe for necking turning, deburring, primer pocket uniforming, etc. do think it will work? thanks allen

Same as the HF lathe. As you saw, I got the HF lathe and paid $399.00 for it using a 20% off coupon.
 
the grizzly i'm looking at is the micro mini lathe. it's a 4"x6". i'm thinking it should work for my intended purpose though. thanks allen
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,267
Messages
2,215,380
Members
79,508
Latest member
Jsm4425
Back
Top