I broke down and bought a box of Lapua 222 Match brass, my first ever splurge on real quality brass.
I ran them through a Lee collet neck die to make sure the necks were round and straighten out any mouth dings. I was really suprised at the variations in force required to pass the arbor through the necks. On about 50% it took only moderate force, on 20% it took a bit less and 20% it took a bit more, but on maybe 5% it took little to no effort, and on 5% it took a *lot* of effort, and one case took so much force the neck folded.
I had just run a box of new Remington 222 through the die a few days ago and it all seemed pretty consistent, so I was suprised at how much variation there was with the Lapua. I can only imagine how inconsistent, not to mention difficult, it would have been to try to seat bullets had I not run them through the neck sizer, and how bad the resulting accuracy would have been. Surely that can't be normal for "Match" brass?
I ran them through a Lee collet neck die to make sure the necks were round and straighten out any mouth dings. I was really suprised at the variations in force required to pass the arbor through the necks. On about 50% it took only moderate force, on 20% it took a bit less and 20% it took a bit more, but on maybe 5% it took little to no effort, and on 5% it took a *lot* of effort, and one case took so much force the neck folded.
I had just run a box of new Remington 222 through the die a few days ago and it all seemed pretty consistent, so I was suprised at how much variation there was with the Lapua. I can only imagine how inconsistent, not to mention difficult, it would have been to try to seat bullets had I not run them through the neck sizer, and how bad the resulting accuracy would have been. Surely that can't be normal for "Match" brass?