No, but first, size the necks as you would normally, then open them up with an expander before neck turning. Set the depth guage to turn just barely into the neck-shoulder junction
Many thanks for quick and helpful replies.Agreed! Keep in mind the purpose of "Neck Turning" is to size the necks of your brass to a certain and uniform thickness and/or to clean up any high spots your brass may have. Neck thickness also can assist you in achieving neck tension for better control of your bullet's release. So just be careful in not cutting too much off if you are getting good accuracy with the present Neck Thickness of your brass.
Alex
Be careful cutting into the shoulders. I was at a match last yr with an Open shooter who was shooting the necks off of a lot of his brass, probably due to letting the cutter get into the shoulder too far.
If turning fired necks you can run into a difficult situation -> proper turning mandrel fit.
You fire the brass, necks expand to chamber & springback, not good for turning. You FL size those necks & they spring back to something not matching your turning mandrel or your new necks or your expander system design(for new necks). Could be anything at that point & folks do run into issues here. After all, a FL sizer is not adjustable in downsizing of necks, and your chamber neck clearance(once fired) will affect results from it. If everything lines up it'll work.
A question to all you guys---so I take it you should use a FL die and not a bushing die if you're going to neck turn?.
I usually do neck turning after first fired the case. This way I can get the brass (more) consistent after passing it on my FL die, than having the brass new from factory and unknown factory sizing.
LRCampos.
...so I take it you should use a FL die and not a bushing die if you're going to neck turn?
That's what I thought. ThanksRight.
Bushing dies can leave an unsized portion of the neck just above the shoulder. Using a FL die eliminates that possibility, follows my practice.
Even if such a die sizes necks more than you'd otherwise feel necessary, annealing fired & cleaned cases before sizing helps maintain consistent brass condition.
After carefully matching an expander mandrel to my neck-turning mandrel's diameter, necks are expanded then turned, then trimmed to length.
Another benefit is that FL sized necks that are then mandrel-sized will have any thickening above the shoulder - that 'donut' you hear about - pushed to the outside where neck-turning will shave it away.
Another benefit is that FL sized necks that are then mandrel-sized will have any thickening above the shoulder - that 'donut' you hear about - pushed to the outside where neck-turning will shave it away.