I just prepped 45 6.5mc hornady cases that were shot 3x then annealed.
I neck sized them in my redding die to 3/4 the way down the neck. Runout was zilch no more than .001. The neck thicknesses were within .0005. I then had to run them thru the body die as they needed it being .003 too fat and a bit too long in headspace. After doing that 8 of the cases developed runout to .003-4. I ran those thru the redding neck die again but that didnt help. I then ran them thru a forster f/l competition die with expander ball. That fixed them and all were back to max .001 runout.
I am not sure why that 8 got deformed. 'They say' to neck size and then body size but it seems to me that it would be better to do the heavy duty work first and then do the light work on the necks.
Starting to wonder why I just dont use a f/l bushing die all the time or that forester one as it squeezes the necks to the same dia as the bushing I use anyhow.
I neck sized them in my redding die to 3/4 the way down the neck. Runout was zilch no more than .001. The neck thicknesses were within .0005. I then had to run them thru the body die as they needed it being .003 too fat and a bit too long in headspace. After doing that 8 of the cases developed runout to .003-4. I ran those thru the redding neck die again but that didnt help. I then ran them thru a forster f/l competition die with expander ball. That fixed them and all were back to max .001 runout.
I am not sure why that 8 got deformed. 'They say' to neck size and then body size but it seems to me that it would be better to do the heavy duty work first and then do the light work on the necks.
Starting to wonder why I just dont use a f/l bushing die all the time or that forester one as it squeezes the necks to the same dia as the bushing I use anyhow.
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