Thanks. Where do I get pin gauge(s)?I use Sinclair mandrels and die. I believe they have an expander(E) and a neck turning(T) for each caliber. The T is 0.201. The E expander is 1 thou under bullet diameter(my caliper measurements). You could all so use a pin gage in a collet bullet puller die, and have much more latitude for inside neck diameter and various brass thicknesses. The T mandrel works good for me, my 20p is an AR.
I understand. I have a JP 223 Wilde chamber gauge. Anything that is to go thru that rifle gets checked. Hence, I am using it to check the re-sized cases. It is measures the entire case and not just the length like LE Wilson.For my BHW barrel, my 20p brass, I can check brass in the Lyman small rifle ammo checker block(223R). If it drops in flush to the second step it will go into battery AND extract. Then it's only a matter of getting neck diameter correct.
That is normalThe fired brass is from my Kimber, so no AR dents and they never hit the ground. Interestingly, the brass gets approx 0.010" longer after resizing.
My final question: what case OAL do you use? 1.750"?
That's because you don't have your FL die screwed down far enough. If a FL die isn't screwed down far enough as the brass goes up inside the FL sizing die it's squeezing down on the case body which causes the base to shoulder length to actually grow or get longer until the shoulder comes in contact with the top of the die and is pushed back.Interestingly, the brass gets approx 0.010" longer after resizing.
Just keep in mind those chamber gauges you're using are usually cut to SAAMI spec not to your actual chamber and chambers vary in size.Thanks B23.
I should have been more specific. I have the die turned down just right. The case fits perfectly in the JP Wilde chamber gauge, as before (and in the L.E. Wilcson gauge). The extra length, I believe, is the neck lengthening due to it getting squeezed. I think I have to re-size the case back down to 1.750"(?) again.
Yes, necking the case down displaces brass and it has to go somewhere,so the case gets longer. I just took 3 pieces of previously once fired, FL sized 223 brass ran it into my .226 case forming bushing and the case length grew .005-.007. These cases were already excessive in length when at 223 so they definitely need to be trimmed down now that they have been necked down to 20 caliber. By the same token, I have formed 20P cases from donor brass that was shorter and did not have to final form trim. I would say that 1.750 is a good trim length for an unknown case chamber length.Thanks B23.
I should have been more specific. I have the die turned down just right. The case fits perfectly in the JP Wilde chamber gauge, as before (and in the L.E. Wilcson gauge). The extra length, I believe, is the neck lengthening due to it getting squeezed. I think I have to re-size the case back down to 1.750"(?) again.
Actually the JP gauge is cut with the same reamer as the chamber, according to JP.Just keep in mind those chamber gauges you're using are usually cut to SAAMI spec not to your actual chamber and chambers vary in size.
Yes...but... No.Actually the JP gauge is cut with the same reamer as the chamber, according to JP.