I didnt know that. this should be interesting. Id use a lathe- if a person doesnt have access to one not sure what id do. you could use a transfer punch that fits in the primer pocket very close to make a center mark. If you had to do it by hand Id put it backwards in a wilson trimmer and rig the drill bit in the handle part. But heck i wasnt there and i have no idea how they did it.The early "BR" cases were "308" with a primer pocket, no hole. Later they made 6mm or maybe it was 7MM BR the same way. It allowed the shooter to decide on the size of the primer hole. The cases were made so that the owner could wildcat them to what they wanted. This is NOS brass I picked up a while back.
Can you put a die upside down in a vise on a drill press, center it up and have at it?So, when there is no pilot hole, how do you center it? I guess that is my biggest brain pain.
i told you in last post you can use a transfer punch for that.So, when there is no pilot hole, how do you center it? I guess that is my biggest brain pain.
How big is your pile? Are we talking 50 pcs or 5000 pcs?I have a pile of old Rem BR brass that comes with no flash hole. So...how does one drill a consistent hole and what size drill? Asking the guys who were around when the early BR cases were offered and used...
This I is what I’d do or something very similar. When making Hornady case gauges I take a short piece of 1” aluminum bar and put it in the lathe. I drill and taper bore it to match the case I’m doing. Takes mby 5 minutes or so to make up the bushing.I took a Wilson case holder and took a light cut on the OD between centers on my tool grinder. Put it in a collet in my lathe, center drilled and drilled with a 1/16th or .0625 drill and deburred.
They dont fit a br norma chamber very well anyway. Youd have to find an antique reamer or have one ground just for the base on that brassI'd give them to somebody that wanted them and buy new brass. Doesn't seem to worth the trouble to me.