New to reloading, and I'm not sure I'm finding good info on my issue so I thought I'd ask here. Sorry for the book I'm about to write, but I'd like some input from some of the experienced reloaders in the room.
Here's the situation:
I've been doing load development on my second rifle (Horizon Carbon Vandal 22 creed 18") and started with 200 pieces of virgin Alpha LRP brass. Before I loaded it the first time, I ran it through my Short Action Customs modular sizing die (set die to not bump shoulder, just size neck) with a mandrel installed to fix some dinged up necks, and trimmed everything to length. Everything went fine, load development went great, found a great load with good SD's (4-5) and shoots in the .3's with the 85.5 bergers. I've killed a couple coyotes and life is great. The load is 42 grains of H4350, alpha lrp brass, gm210m primer, sending 85.5 bergers at around 3170 fps out of an 18" barrel. I've had no signs of pressure during load development except 2 primers leaking gas and one loose primer when I did seating depth testing and got close to the lands and speed/pressure jumped up. I do think the load might be pretty hot according to a free internal ballistics calculator I put my info into, but again no pressure signs anywhere. Also to note, the next good node with less speed (pressure) is around 3,000 fps and that wasn't super exciting.
Now the problem:
I deprimed the first 100 pieces of the alpha brass I used for load development, sent them through the tumbler with stainless media, dried them, annealed them, tumbled and dried again, lubed them with Dillion spray lube and went to sizing. The sizing die is shaving brass off of the bottom 1/3 of the case on around 60% to 70% of the cases, some quite a bit, and it obviously takes more force than it should to run the die down. Note here: So after the first few sized hard I started rubbing the cases with One Shot case sizing wax along with the spray wax that was on them. Also, after the first run through the sizing die some are longer after they come out than before they went in by a couple thou. I'm using Area 419 headspace gauges, Mitutoyo calipers, and I'm competent with them, so I know it's the brass and not the tool in case that gets brought up. So basically brass goes in at 1.538" and some that run through with "normal ish, but on the high side of normal" pressure come out at 1.536-1.5375 which isn't ideal with that big of a spread, but it's something I can live with since I'm new. Some others come out the same as they went in (hard sizing, but minimal brass shaving), and if I run them through again they come out at 1.535-1.536. And then some come out 1 to 2 thou longer at 1.5390 - 1.5400 (very hard to size and shaved brass). If I run the very hard sizing brass though the sizing die again it'll go to 1.538, but it doesn't matter how many times I run it through after 2 times, it stays at 1.538. Now if I take that same exact piece of brass out, and use my fingers to rub the sizing wax around a bit, then run it through it comes out at 1.536 almost every time, and it sizes really nice pressure wise.
So that's where I'm at currently. I did get all 100 pieces of brass sized to somewhere between 1.535 and 1.5375 which gives me .5 to 3 though shoulder bump. Some only got sized one, some two times, and some three or four to get it to that size. I'm guessing neck tension will be all over the place because of how many times it went through, but I am running a mandrel so at least dimensionally it'll be close, and I'll anneal it before I size it next time so hopefully that's just a one time issue. Now I've read on SAC's website that their dies are meant to size more of the case base than "normal" dies. I've also think I've read that if my load is too hot the brass with conform to the chamber and not spring back as much as they normally should. I also didn't clean my die after I sized the 200 pieces of virgin brass, but I don't see that affecting much as it's the same brass and the same lube, but I could be wrong there.
So if you're still with me, what is my issue with this process? Do I simply need to back off on my load? Is my chamber over sized and that's the issue? Is this somewhat normal with SAC modular sizing dies? If it is my chamber, how do I measure it to figure that out? I have 50 rounds of loaded ammo at the above specs that I want to use for coyote hunting this year as I have my elevations out to 600 pretty on point.
Please let me know your thoughts, and I appreciate any feedback you may give.
Here's the situation:
I've been doing load development on my second rifle (Horizon Carbon Vandal 22 creed 18") and started with 200 pieces of virgin Alpha LRP brass. Before I loaded it the first time, I ran it through my Short Action Customs modular sizing die (set die to not bump shoulder, just size neck) with a mandrel installed to fix some dinged up necks, and trimmed everything to length. Everything went fine, load development went great, found a great load with good SD's (4-5) and shoots in the .3's with the 85.5 bergers. I've killed a couple coyotes and life is great. The load is 42 grains of H4350, alpha lrp brass, gm210m primer, sending 85.5 bergers at around 3170 fps out of an 18" barrel. I've had no signs of pressure during load development except 2 primers leaking gas and one loose primer when I did seating depth testing and got close to the lands and speed/pressure jumped up. I do think the load might be pretty hot according to a free internal ballistics calculator I put my info into, but again no pressure signs anywhere. Also to note, the next good node with less speed (pressure) is around 3,000 fps and that wasn't super exciting.
Now the problem:
I deprimed the first 100 pieces of the alpha brass I used for load development, sent them through the tumbler with stainless media, dried them, annealed them, tumbled and dried again, lubed them with Dillion spray lube and went to sizing. The sizing die is shaving brass off of the bottom 1/3 of the case on around 60% to 70% of the cases, some quite a bit, and it obviously takes more force than it should to run the die down. Note here: So after the first few sized hard I started rubbing the cases with One Shot case sizing wax along with the spray wax that was on them. Also, after the first run through the sizing die some are longer after they come out than before they went in by a couple thou. I'm using Area 419 headspace gauges, Mitutoyo calipers, and I'm competent with them, so I know it's the brass and not the tool in case that gets brought up. So basically brass goes in at 1.538" and some that run through with "normal ish, but on the high side of normal" pressure come out at 1.536-1.5375 which isn't ideal with that big of a spread, but it's something I can live with since I'm new. Some others come out the same as they went in (hard sizing, but minimal brass shaving), and if I run them through again they come out at 1.535-1.536. And then some come out 1 to 2 thou longer at 1.5390 - 1.5400 (very hard to size and shaved brass). If I run the very hard sizing brass though the sizing die again it'll go to 1.538, but it doesn't matter how many times I run it through after 2 times, it stays at 1.538. Now if I take that same exact piece of brass out, and use my fingers to rub the sizing wax around a bit, then run it through it comes out at 1.536 almost every time, and it sizes really nice pressure wise.
So that's where I'm at currently. I did get all 100 pieces of brass sized to somewhere between 1.535 and 1.5375 which gives me .5 to 3 though shoulder bump. Some only got sized one, some two times, and some three or four to get it to that size. I'm guessing neck tension will be all over the place because of how many times it went through, but I am running a mandrel so at least dimensionally it'll be close, and I'll anneal it before I size it next time so hopefully that's just a one time issue. Now I've read on SAC's website that their dies are meant to size more of the case base than "normal" dies. I've also think I've read that if my load is too hot the brass with conform to the chamber and not spring back as much as they normally should. I also didn't clean my die after I sized the 200 pieces of virgin brass, but I don't see that affecting much as it's the same brass and the same lube, but I could be wrong there.
So if you're still with me, what is my issue with this process? Do I simply need to back off on my load? Is my chamber over sized and that's the issue? Is this somewhat normal with SAC modular sizing dies? If it is my chamber, how do I measure it to figure that out? I have 50 rounds of loaded ammo at the above specs that I want to use for coyote hunting this year as I have my elevations out to 600 pretty on point.
Please let me know your thoughts, and I appreciate any feedback you may give.









