mk_gram said:
I measured the neck thickness after turning the necks to remove the donuts and as best I can determine it is .012" thick. How do you determine how thick the case neck should be? I believe I read that it should not be less than .010.
Here's how I determine the thickness of my brass.
First, I know that my 30BR chamber is .330" in diameter. I also know that I want the case neck to measure .328" with a bullet seated in it, to give me a total clearance of .002", or .001" on each side.
I know that the custom flat based bullet that I've chosen is .3084" measured at the pressure ring. That information is printed on the side of the box that Ronnie Cheek ships his bullets in, along with other info. Regardless, I measure it, to confirm that fact.
Now it's only a matter of simple math. .3280" minus .3084 = .0196". .0196" divided by 2 = .0098". The brass should be turned to .0098". Or, 9.8 thousandths.
.3084" bullet diameter + .0098" brass + .0098" brass = .3280" [loaded round diameter, measured at the pressure ring if your bullet has a pressure ring. Boattails don't have one.]
All of this is determined by the diameter of your chamber, and how much total clearance you want between the chamber and the load round.
--------------------------------------------------
Now, let's just say your chamber is in fact .333". That you were going to use the same bullet I use, and you also wanted a total clearance of .002".
Your figures would be:
.333" chamber minus total clearance of .002" = .331" [the diameter of your loaded round measured at the pressure ring.
.3310" minus .3084 = .0226 divided by 2 = .0113. You would turn your brass to .0113" or said another way, to 11.3 thousandths.
Here it is expressed another way:
.3084" bullet + .0113" turned brass + .0113" turned brass = .3310" load round measured at the pressure ring.
Hope this helps.