30 of em id be using an inertia hammer
Agree with above on check ing by re seat by hand, the inertia puller works but collet is much faster and I've always reused the bullets in testing with no problems.Try to re-seat a bullet by hand, if it won't go I wouldn't waste time resizing.
I pulled some when testing HBN. These were stuck so bad that I put 50+ lbs force on the press lever without budging some of them and was lifting the bench off the floor. Even at that no marks from the RCBS puller. You can see how hard these stuck in the cases.I just pulled 800-900 .223 with the hornady bullet puller , my first time using it.... It did a great job... Now i am not planning on using a bunch of fmj 55gr bullets for accuracy especially since the go through an iron sight rifle and my vision isn't exactly great at 51....
Those bullets had been loaded since 1992 and yes a large percentage was stuck big time.... But even with that it pulled with only a few scratches from the puller... That little Hornady puller is fast and easy to use , I am not a big hornady fan but I do like that little tool... I do not regret buying it , even if I only use it for that one job..
I pulled some when testing HBN. These were stuck so bad that I put 50+ lbs force on the press lever without budging some of them and was lifting the bench off the floor. Even at that no marks from the RCBS puller. You can see how hard these stuck in the cases.
View attachment 1126287
I pulled some when testing HBN. These were stuck so bad that I put 50+ lbs force on the press lever without budging some of them and was lifting the bench off the floor. Even at that no marks from the RCBS puller. You can see how hard these stuck in the cases.
View attachment 1126287
The FCD ???No need to resize, but I would run them through the FCD.
No. That was from a test on HBN. It made the bullets stick in the necks and hard to remove and these only had .002" interference fit. These were seated and pulled right back out. I have experienced bullet weld which also made them hard to remove. There absolutely would be an increase in pressure and with a hot load, and could be dangerous. I'm not sure the exact cause of bullet weld. It could be moisture or perspiration from touching the bullets, or cases too clean? I now coat the necks and bullets with Imperial dry lube and I'm going to spot check some that have been loaded for over 2 years to see it it eliminates the problem.Would you say that that is an example of bullet weld? Would you expect extra pressure if you fired them?
No. That was from a test on HBN. It made the bullets stick in the necks and hard to remove and these only had .002" interference fit. These were seated and pulled right back out. I have experienced bullet weld which also made them hard to remove. There absolutely would be an increase in pressure and with a hot load, and could be dangerous. I'm not sure the exact cause of bullet weld. It could be moisture or perspiration from touching the bullets, or cases too clean? I now coat the necks and bullets with Imperial dry lube and I'm going to spot check some that have been loaded for over 2 years to see it it eliminates the problem.