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Hello all,
Scratching my head on this one. Bought a new set of Redding Competition dies - both the neck sizing and the seating. Am trying to work up a load per Tony Boyer's book BORA so I start by finding my Jamb length. I think I got it. Set my seating die. Measure with my Davidson seating depth checker attached to my Mitutoyu digital calipers. Reads 2.7020. I leave the die set.
So now I'm loading three shells at a time. They are cleaned. I pass three through the neck sizer die. I clean the inside with a brush, clean the primer pocket, prime the three, carefully put in 24.2gr Varget, put a Berger 73gr bullet on top, put it in the seating die. I do this for a total of 9 cases, only changing the measure of Varget. I measure the cases and they are all over the place from 2.7040 - 2.7130 which is a 9 thou spread. So how the heck am I supposed to find my sweet spot when the dies cannot consistently seat a bullet? Am I doing something wrong?
I measured a couple dozen previously loaded cases which were loaded with a $30 Hornady die set and they were only off by 2 thou.
If you guy don't come up with a good answer I'll just have to give Redding a call.
BTW, this is in my brand new Redding T7 Turret press too.
Thanks,
Michael
+1Michael,
Thid never happened tp me, but I have seen others complain about it, so it is about as good if a thing to look into as anything else. It is quite possible that the end of the seating stem where it contacts your bullet is not very compatible with the specific bullet you use. You know, the stems are kind of a "one size fits all" situation, which in some cases does not work out well. People have had instances where the seating stem has contacted the tip of the bullet, not the ogive, which is not very acurate to seat off of, or take measurements from, because, as you know, the tips vary more than just about anything on the bullet.
Do you anneal? A difference in neck tension between cases will result in different seating depth length measurements.I'll check my math...
Yes I cleaned the dies before installing them.
Could be my error... I'll re-think it...
I don't sort brass nor bullets. I don't trim and I don't turn.
I reload...
+1
Which is exactly what I suggested on 24 February.
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Do you anneal? A difference in neck tension between cases will result in different seating depth length measurements.
I found the T7 to have too much slop in it for seating precisely. I modified mine by removing enough metal from the spacer so I could lock it down tight. Sans neck tension issues, all bullets seat within .001. I am NOT shooting matches with this ammo.
I measure the cases and they are all over the place from 2.7040 - 2.7130 which is a 9 thou spread. So how the heck am I supposed to find my sweet spot when the dies cannot consistently seat a bullet?
Are you using the turret bushing that came with the turret that you indicated has too much slop?
I talked to Redding when I first got my T-7 and he said two things are very important. First, the turret should be torqued to 42-45 lbs and second, use only the bushing that came with the turret. They're manufactured as a matched pair and shouldn't be mixed up. He also told me that an almost imperceptible amount of play is manufactured into the press and will be accounted for in the operation of it.
I have no reason to doubt anything that he said, especially since I had called on a completely unrelated issue. I follow his instructions and have never had a problem with inconsistencies in any of my ammo.
Yes, I am using the Redding Body die. Not sure about the "bump", just using the die as is, nothing special. Screwing the die down until it contacts the shell holder.
Michael