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That’s what I’ve used, works wellI use a carbide chucking reamer when opening the necks up. -Al
just remember you paid for precision machine work...are you going to be able to maintian their stds ??
Clearance is clearance, right? I typically use a carbide chucking reamer to open a bushing shelf but I've done as you mention...buy a few good drill bits and get after it. If it doesn't touch, who cares. It's clearance. Not sure about those dies, though. Most are cased or otherwise very thin hardening.Not going to lie… a twist drill works pretty well, and if you use one big enough to just leave a little bit of the shelf, the neck never hits it. Not pretty if you scope it, but it makes good ammo. If you’re doing it for a customer, I’d do it right
True, but you gotta be way over before it matters. Nice to keep it within about .010 but that's better than necessary. But yes, you can get too big if you load really hot. I use several redding 6.5 Grendel bushing dies for the 6mm Grendel cartridge. The factory hole is about .308 iirc, and my 6mm necks are no smaller than .271, fired. No problem unless I'm way hotter than I should be but I've found that magic spot on more than one occasion.Yeah. I don't want to open it too much either, the part I'd be cutting away sizes the shoulder
I’d probably go bigger so it doesn’t possibly scratch on the shelf on the way up after being fired and neck expanded.I'd need something closer to .315 diameter for the neck to pass through (7mm turned to .310).
I'll bore it out. Once my power comes back on....