+ Later! Frankzfastmalibu said:Annealing will help. The problem is your press is flexing. The best way to deal with that is redding competition shell holders. They allow you to set the die for a hard cam over, essentially preloading the press. then you adjust your bump by swapping out the different shellholders. Also, take a little polishing compound and a shotgun bore mop and polish the inside of the die. I do it to all my dies, it reduces the sizing force and helps with consistency. Just some ideas for you.
JRS said:All of your problems will go down the drain by using the WTC sizing dieI put my rockchuckers and co-ax in mothballs ;D and now use my Classic cast presses religiously. No cam over. Don't need it 8)
JRS said:All of your problems will go down the drain by using the WTC sizing dieI put my rockchuckers and co-ax in mothballs ;D and now use my Classic cast presses religiously. No cam over. Don't need it 8)
Yes, if you want a perfect fit, Al would need a couple of fired cases. Yes, the inserts slide into the die. WTC will also provide a insert for neck sizing only if you wish. It is expensive, but when you consider the quality of the steel used, the man hours expended, and obvious precision, the expense is palatable. When one takes into consideration the amount of money tied up in a custom action, barrel, chambering, quality brass and bullets, why skimp on the one piece of equipment that is going to produce the straightest ammo?jam711 said:Wasn't aware of that. Just goes to show there is something to be learned every day. Does that mean you need to send fired cases for each Cal. you use, and the sleeves fit into the die ? That has to be one expensive proposition, like LH indicated.![]()