Just compared two groups of loaded rounds. 25 in one 28 in the other. Same 4/5x fired, weight sorted, trimmed to thou, prepped Lapua brass from same box. No neck turning, but otherwise quite uniform. Only variable that is different between batch one and batch two is the sizing dies used. Same technique in all aspects. Loaded on Rock Chucker. Same classic rock station playing.
Batch one, Redding deluxe FL sizer with carbide button expander. Bullets , 77 SMK moly, seated with redding deluxe seater. Average runout on 21st Century concentricity gauge measured on bullet is 4.5 thou.
Batch two, Lee neck collet die then Redding body die. Bullets, 77 SMK moly, seated with redding deluxe seater. Average runout on 21st Century concentricity gauge measured on bullet is 1.5 thou.
So I can see a substantial amount of the runout was being created during the sizing operation. I bought a Forster Ultra seating die but it was faulty and is going back to Forster for repair. I'm eager to see what impact it has, if any, upon getting it back.
Dan
Batch one, Redding deluxe FL sizer with carbide button expander. Bullets , 77 SMK moly, seated with redding deluxe seater. Average runout on 21st Century concentricity gauge measured on bullet is 4.5 thou.
Batch two, Lee neck collet die then Redding body die. Bullets, 77 SMK moly, seated with redding deluxe seater. Average runout on 21st Century concentricity gauge measured on bullet is 1.5 thou.
So I can see a substantial amount of the runout was being created during the sizing operation. I bought a Forster Ultra seating die but it was faulty and is going back to Forster for repair. I'm eager to see what impact it has, if any, upon getting it back.
Dan