Ned Ludd
Silver $$ Contributor
The mandrel is sized .002 under bullet dimension. (.222 in this case) and gives VERY consistent neck tension vs an expander ball. When I reload bigger calipers I will use a bushing/collet die that gets the neck barely under sized, and finish them off in a carbide mandrel. In my mind, I want the inside of the neck to be round, not the outside to make up for any imperfections in the brass.
I single feed when I'm shoot this gun. Gas is not adjustable.
FWIW - I've also used a .222" carbide mandrel and your thoughts on what it should do mirror what I used to think. However, in practice, MV's were extremely erratic, exactly like the values you showed above. I don't ever use the expander ball in a resizing die, they come out as soon as I get it. I just let the bushing do its job. Once it became obvious there was a problem, I compared MVs using brass prepped solely by bushing die to those with brass prepped with the expander mandrel. Brass prepped with the bushing die was fine and gave the typical ES values I expect. Turns out that in my hands, the expander mandrel WAS the problem, so I quit using it. You can do whatever you like, but the fact we both used the same approach and both had ridiculously high ES values is probably not a coincidence. I have also used the expander mandrel with larger calibers and it works just fine. But in the .223, it wasn't worth messing with any further to try and get it to work.