after using my press for a few years I decided that I need better lock rings as I posted. I never did like the slotted screw heads from the start, and had some Lyman rings laying around, so I tried them. What an improvment! Later on I played around with the adjustable jaws to see if anything could be gained. I ground about three or four thousandths off the face to make them looser, and that helped a little bit. Then a guy that has one told me about setting up the jaws so that they just barely hold the case during extraction, and saw even more difference. I now rarely change my jaw position as I have them so loose that they will handle the .470" and .378 case heads at the sametime (have never had a single stuck case ever).
When using the Lyman rings, I first put pressure under the die, and then tighten the ring. Then if I want to move it I just loosen it enough to move the ring on the die body the amount I want. Most always it stays strait, but if it dosn't I put the die under pressure and retighten the rings. I rarely see a case with .0015" TIR come out of it loaded, and often see them in the .001" area. Best I've done have been in the seven to eight tenth area loaded.
gary
When using the Lyman rings, I first put pressure under the die, and then tighten the ring. Then if I want to move it I just loosen it enough to move the ring on the die body the amount I want. Most always it stays strait, but if it dosn't I put the die under pressure and retighten the rings. I rarely see a case with .0015" TIR come out of it loaded, and often see them in the .001" area. Best I've done have been in the seven to eight tenth area loaded.
gary