i have been perhaps going about this in an incorrect manner when loading for a 6.5 Creedmoor cartridge.these are the steps that I take
1) Decap Brass
2) Fl resize using a match grade die set with a bushing of .003" under that of the neck diameter
3) Trim brass to a given case length
4) Use a Redding body die & competition shell holder set to establish a .002" neck bump
4) Anneal brass
5) Tumble brass cases in steel pin media to clean
6) Dry brass @ 104 degrees for 1 hour to remove any residual water( done in a parts dryer)
7) Hand Inspect brass then prime my hulls
8) Seat bullet to a given Horandy bullet seating Comparartor reading minus the jump factor
Herein lies the rub (neck tension vary s consequentially,my bullet seating depth does as much as .003" C.O.A.L.
I must measure each round starting high and creep up to the C.O.A.L. very carefully. I have noticed that as the neck tension increases the bullets do not seat the same way and need to be adjusted usually by.003" to make the correct jump factor and C.O.A.L dimensions.
Do you think as I do that perhaps the annealing of the brass should be done using the FL sizing match grade die set after the brass has been tumbled and not before? i suspect that my brass necKwall ID has changed from the annealing itself.
What are your thoughts? OBTW brass was full length resized then run through a Sinclair neck expanding die .001" over ID to allow fitting on my neck turning tool's arbor which is .001" oversize.
I only use this die before I neck turn virgin brass,and the brass that i'm referring to has been fired 2-3 times and is not been neck turned again however it has been annealed before each round has been assembled.
1) Decap Brass
2) Fl resize using a match grade die set with a bushing of .003" under that of the neck diameter
3) Trim brass to a given case length
4) Use a Redding body die & competition shell holder set to establish a .002" neck bump
4) Anneal brass
5) Tumble brass cases in steel pin media to clean
6) Dry brass @ 104 degrees for 1 hour to remove any residual water( done in a parts dryer)
7) Hand Inspect brass then prime my hulls
8) Seat bullet to a given Horandy bullet seating Comparartor reading minus the jump factor
Herein lies the rub (neck tension vary s consequentially,my bullet seating depth does as much as .003" C.O.A.L.
I must measure each round starting high and creep up to the C.O.A.L. very carefully. I have noticed that as the neck tension increases the bullets do not seat the same way and need to be adjusted usually by.003" to make the correct jump factor and C.O.A.L dimensions.
Do you think as I do that perhaps the annealing of the brass should be done using the FL sizing match grade die set after the brass has been tumbled and not before? i suspect that my brass necKwall ID has changed from the annealing itself.
What are your thoughts? OBTW brass was full length resized then run through a Sinclair neck expanding die .001" over ID to allow fitting on my neck turning tool's arbor which is .001" oversize.
I only use this die before I neck turn virgin brass,and the brass that i'm referring to has been fired 2-3 times and is not been neck turned again however it has been annealed before each round has been assembled.