I am sure most of what I am puzzled about is elementary to most here, but hopefully that will make it easy to explain.
My understanding is that a conventional resizing die will resize the case and the neck, centering the neck so that the outside is concentric with the case. I also read that Redding Type S dies use neck inserts to resize the neck to a desired diameter, and that these inserts float to center themselves around the neck. If the neck is not centered with the case, how can that be good? What am I missing here? If there is no floating neck insert in a Forster die, and Forster will hone to your neck diameter, that would appear to be the way to go, assuming the neck portion of Forster die is concentric to the case. Don't hit me too hard on the naive question, just a novice trying to make sense of it all.
- Phil
My understanding is that a conventional resizing die will resize the case and the neck, centering the neck so that the outside is concentric with the case. I also read that Redding Type S dies use neck inserts to resize the neck to a desired diameter, and that these inserts float to center themselves around the neck. If the neck is not centered with the case, how can that be good? What am I missing here? If there is no floating neck insert in a Forster die, and Forster will hone to your neck diameter, that would appear to be the way to go, assuming the neck portion of Forster die is concentric to the case. Don't hit me too hard on the naive question, just a novice trying to make sense of it all.
- Phil









