Okay I have been reloading for years, maybe someone has noticed this before or maybe not. If you are bumping your shoulder on your brass, the question is WHY? I have been looking to find the answer. In my line of work as an A Tool & Die Maker you have to give dies clearance to form the material the dies are forming. If it doesn't have the correct clearance the die will rip the material or leave it looking like a pie pan wrinkled up.
Now I have taken the time to setup my press to find out the why. I'm guilty of bumping the shoulder on my brass. I have a shell holder that will let me bump the shoulder back.
TEST
I set my die up using a standard shell holder, 0.125 of an inch from where the brass sits on the holder to where the holder bumps the die. Setup an indicator on top of the die and Zero it, to see what i am reading when i bump my brass with the bump that is required to get a smooth bolt closure. I put my bump shell holder in, and set the die to where i size the brass normally, -0.0105 of and inch is the reading i get when I size a brass. Now with that being said I use my GO GAUGE to see how far the die is set from there, the reading i get is -0.009 of an inch on the GO GAUGE.
Now the math says I am bumping my brass a total of -0.0015 of an inch.
So if the head spacing is where the cause of need to bump the shoulder is, why not add .0015 to the back of the head space gauge?
If it is the die, why not take it off the bottom of the die?
Your thoughts???
Now I have taken the time to setup my press to find out the why. I'm guilty of bumping the shoulder on my brass. I have a shell holder that will let me bump the shoulder back.
TEST
I set my die up using a standard shell holder, 0.125 of an inch from where the brass sits on the holder to where the holder bumps the die. Setup an indicator on top of the die and Zero it, to see what i am reading when i bump my brass with the bump that is required to get a smooth bolt closure. I put my bump shell holder in, and set the die to where i size the brass normally, -0.0105 of and inch is the reading i get when I size a brass. Now with that being said I use my GO GAUGE to see how far the die is set from there, the reading i get is -0.009 of an inch on the GO GAUGE.
Now the math says I am bumping my brass a total of -0.0015 of an inch.
So if the head spacing is where the cause of need to bump the shoulder is, why not add .0015 to the back of the head space gauge?
If it is the die, why not take it off the bottom of the die?
Your thoughts???
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