Have been trying to reload some of my 223 cases, most of which have a ding in the neck. They are all once fired Lapua brass that were FL resized, chamfered, and trimmed prior to first use. With the neck dings, I tried running an oversize mandrel through the necks first and than a full length resize with a Redding type S neck collet die (without the expander ball), but the necks remained with a slight ding.
I then tried running the same dinged cases through the type S die only with the carbide expander ball in place, and the necks ended up much rounder than with the two step method of mandrel and then neck resize. Seems like the mandrel followed by neck resizing did not do as good a job as when using the expander ball.
So, for those that have done the experiment, how much difference does it actually make doing a two step (oversize mandrel followed by FL die and Type S neck collet die without expander ball) versus one step (FL type S die with expander ball in place)? Would like to save a step, seems like the one step did a better job in ironing out neck dings (according to concentricity measurements), but I am afraid about potentially losing accuracy.
Advice?
I then tried running the same dinged cases through the type S die only with the carbide expander ball in place, and the necks ended up much rounder than with the two step method of mandrel and then neck resize. Seems like the mandrel followed by neck resizing did not do as good a job as when using the expander ball.
So, for those that have done the experiment, how much difference does it actually make doing a two step (oversize mandrel followed by FL die and Type S neck collet die without expander ball) versus one step (FL type S die with expander ball in place)? Would like to save a step, seems like the one step did a better job in ironing out neck dings (according to concentricity measurements), but I am afraid about potentially losing accuracy.
Advice?