I'm just curious and not sure anyone can answer my question but does anyone know why more die manufacturers haven't started moving their expander ball further up the stem like Forster? I'm wondering if Forster may have a patent on the design / principle but I'm speculating???
I've been fighting concentricity issues with my standard Redding dies which I purchased before I was sophisticated enough in my reloading to appreciate concentricity. After a lot of research and study, I now recognize there are a number of ways to attack concentricity problems. Most seem to involve neck bushings, and neck turning, etc which requires more time, effort, and money than I'm willing to invest. I don't need to remove ALL runout but the runout my Redding resizing dies introduce is pretty unacceptable.
It seems like a good compromise type solution is the Forster FL sizing die with the expander ball in a position to do it's job while the neck is still supported. But why haven't the other big names adopted this?
Not to bad mouth Redding (almost all of my dies are Reddings) but as I become more worldly and experienced in reloading, the less impressed I'm becoming with Redding. Heck...their boxes aren't even big enough to hold their dies once dialed in many circumstances. You'd think at the price point they're selling at, they'd innovate and solve some problems every now and again.
I've been fighting concentricity issues with my standard Redding dies which I purchased before I was sophisticated enough in my reloading to appreciate concentricity. After a lot of research and study, I now recognize there are a number of ways to attack concentricity problems. Most seem to involve neck bushings, and neck turning, etc which requires more time, effort, and money than I'm willing to invest. I don't need to remove ALL runout but the runout my Redding resizing dies introduce is pretty unacceptable.
It seems like a good compromise type solution is the Forster FL sizing die with the expander ball in a position to do it's job while the neck is still supported. But why haven't the other big names adopted this?
Not to bad mouth Redding (almost all of my dies are Reddings) but as I become more worldly and experienced in reloading, the less impressed I'm becoming with Redding. Heck...their boxes aren't even big enough to hold their dies once dialed in many circumstances. You'd think at the price point they're selling at, they'd innovate and solve some problems every now and again.









