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And will not fit in the magazineThere's no way he's seating too long, it's too deep. The suggested COL for that bullet is 2.390.
Yep, I run into that more with 5.56/223 than any other round. I got a single feed magazine sled to feed the long ones.And will not fit in the magazine
The error is on me. I was looking for 75 gr BRHP and incorrectly ordered the ELD-M. The Hornady reloading manual clearly called out a COL of 2.39 so it’s also my error in not reading. That said, 55 gr is too low a weight for what I’m looking for, ideally I’d run between a 62 and a 77.Nobody crimps unless it's required for a semi-auto??? Sounds like your seating the bullets to long, how else would they get pushed in. My Sierra manual give 2.260" COAL for all bullet wts. Sounds like 2.250" should be OK. I would try one at 2.240" to easily see if it solves the problem. What's the COL with the bullet pushed in? Standard FL dies should give good neck tension. A few measurements with a cheap digital caliper would give you some good info, case neck diameter before sizing, after sizing, with bullet in the neck. Match bullets don't have a crimping grove. You are not supposed to crimp them. Are you sure it's a crimping die.
Just looked at some of the comments and pics. Need to reread them. A lot of info.
The freebore on your rifle was probably made for 52-55 Gr bullets, not a long 75 gr bullet. I adjust my dies with a bump guage the instructions can be a long way from the ideal adjustment. Why did you choose 75 gr bullets?
Like @Rocketvapor mentioned, there are plenty of bullets in the 62-77gr range that can be loaded to fit a magazine.The error is on me. I was looking for 75 gr BRHP and incorrectly ordered the ELD-M. The Hornady reloading manual clearly called out a COL of 2.39 so it’s also my error in not reading. That said, 55 gr is too low a weight for what I’m looking for, ideally I’d run between a 62 and a 77.
Thank ls for all the feedback, I will crawl back under my desk and learn to read a bit.
I windowed the front of a magazine to gain 2.315 on a 6x45.Yep, I run into that more with 5.56/223 than any other round. I got a single feed magazine sled to feed the long ones.
Load the ELDMs to the proper length and single load them in your rifle… they shoot very well.The error is on me. I was looking for 75 gr BRHP and incorrectly ordered the ELD-M. The Hornady reloading manual clearly called out a COL of 2.39 so it’s also my error in not reading. That said, 55 gr is too low a weight for what I’m looking for, ideally I’d run between a 62 and a 77.
Thank ls for all the feedback, I will crawl back under my desk and learn to read a bit.
Seating it too deep to the point the ogive is in the neck, then trying to crimp is most likely what pushed the bullet into the case.The problem i think is there is no bushing in his die and the bullet just drops in. So the neck is not sized at all …..is what i got from reading his initial posting. I could be all wrong but dont think so.
I dont think the initial problem was ever solved on why the bullets were dropping back into the case with no neck tension.?
Would be nice to know what set of dies he is using that comes with a collet die.
Using a collet die could be collet crimp or collet neck sizing.
My guess is a Lee 3 die set.
With most of the bearing surface below the neck a crimp wouldn't take much for the bullet to fall in.
Now to get the bullet out.
View attachment 1482828
This was really helpful as I wasn’t sure which was the correct one. I’ll definitely only look for 3 die sets from now on. Thank youA couple of notes since this can be confusing for a rookie:
I use the same dies.
Collet Dies-Use only on bolt action rifle on brass shot in that rifle.
Full Length Sizing die- Use in bolt action or semi-auto
Dead Length Sizing die- Does not taper crimp the mouth of the brass.
Factory crimp die- can be used, especially to provide a light crimp on none cannelure bullets.
Most people do not crimp for 223/556 Seimi-auto.
The vast majority of manufacturers only offer two-die sets...sizing and seating. The seating dies from these manufacturers can be set to crimp, but crimping is totally unnecessary with most calibers. Collet sizing dies should be used only on brass fired in your rifle so the body of the case is formed to your chamber. The problem with that is that the case shoulder eventually has to be pushed back in order to chamber. This would require either a full body sizing die or a body only sizing die. Factory Crimp Dies are used to ensure functioning by not only crimping, but post-sizing the case to spec...another step not needed. Works great for straight wall handgun or rifle cartridges but pretty much useless for bottleneck cases.This was really helpful as I wasn’t sure which was the correct one. I’ll definitely only look for 3 die sets from now on. Thank you