I have a Grizzly benchtop mini lathe that I have been playing around with as a trimmer.
I bought a forster cutter shaft off of ebay, which I dial in to dead center in my 4 jaw chuck, everything good on that end.
On the other end, I'm using a shell holder from a Lee case length gauge/trimmer in a drill chuck. it is oriented so the opening is at the bottom when loosened, and I have a pair of vice grips on the lock ring, so I stuff a shell up in, flip the vice grips over letting gravity tighten the ring, and I'm ready to trim.
The issue is the shell orientation is far from consistent, sometimes the mouth is pointed a little up, down, left, right, ect. There is enough slop in the quill when I pull the lock off that the case can or or less auto-align on the pilot, but this ends up with pressure on one side of the pilot, where the case rubs up against it. This doesn't cause any cutting problems, but it leaves some scratches inside the case neck. I tried using a little CLP on the pilot today as an experiment, less scratching but not eliminated. I've also considered polishing the pilot (surprised nobody offers pilots w/ a mirror finish). It would probably help if I stopped the lathe, ran the case forward loose in the holder, then tightened it when it was supported by the pilot, but i don't want to be turning my lathe off and on a thousand times.
Anybody have any thoughts on a better tailstock mounted shell holder setup? Or am I worrying about nothing when it comes to the scratches inside the neck? I'm not loading benchrest level rounds, but don't want to be giving up potential accuracy before I've even finished loading the round.
I bought a forster cutter shaft off of ebay, which I dial in to dead center in my 4 jaw chuck, everything good on that end.
On the other end, I'm using a shell holder from a Lee case length gauge/trimmer in a drill chuck. it is oriented so the opening is at the bottom when loosened, and I have a pair of vice grips on the lock ring, so I stuff a shell up in, flip the vice grips over letting gravity tighten the ring, and I'm ready to trim.
The issue is the shell orientation is far from consistent, sometimes the mouth is pointed a little up, down, left, right, ect. There is enough slop in the quill when I pull the lock off that the case can or or less auto-align on the pilot, but this ends up with pressure on one side of the pilot, where the case rubs up against it. This doesn't cause any cutting problems, but it leaves some scratches inside the case neck. I tried using a little CLP on the pilot today as an experiment, less scratching but not eliminated. I've also considered polishing the pilot (surprised nobody offers pilots w/ a mirror finish). It would probably help if I stopped the lathe, ran the case forward loose in the holder, then tightened it when it was supported by the pilot, but i don't want to be turning my lathe off and on a thousand times.
Anybody have any thoughts on a better tailstock mounted shell holder setup? Or am I worrying about nothing when it comes to the scratches inside the neck? I'm not loading benchrest level rounds, but don't want to be giving up potential accuracy before I've even finished loading the round.