Hornady has Shims for this issue, if you contact them.
Fits Above the ORing, below the collar.
Fits Above the ORing, below the collar.
thisI use another press strictly for more critical operations such as sizing
case anneal? case lots? dwell time in the sizing die? technique on the press handle? amount of lube?I've often wondered what causes me to have this issued when everything is loaded the same and shot in the same chamber.
Movement on the up stroke . As long as I keep them tight then I'm good . No gap when in battery . Lots of good recommendations here . I'll check the rubber o-ring metal God .Do you just see a little space in between or are you actually seeing movement on the up stroke ?
Can someone please tell me if there is a way to go back to threads on a Hornady lock n load press . I have the iron press and love it except the bushings . They sure are handy , but they wear and and get play in-between them . Using bullet pullers really wears them faster . I tighten them up good ,but they still wiggle back if I don't watch close. I'll process 10+ RDS and notice the play ( 1/64" or more ). Does another press manufacturer make inserts with threads ?
To me the ease of use outweighs the stop every so often and make sure the sizer is tight in the press. The magic formula I have found is check every 20 rounds.
To get the best case consistency you need for the ramp to cam over on the up stroke. It has to be enough so that the extra pressure of sizing the brass doesn't keep the ram from meeting the bottom of the die. So each time you are putting a force on that tightening ramp and the coefficient of sliding friction being high will not let it loosen much but it will loosen just a little on each case. Keep repeating that operation and it does get looser to the point things might have moved a .001 or so.
Now what I have found is to me an even bigger horror story. I have set up for another caliber and needed some more bushings for the sizer and seater and I didn't have any in my reserves. So I ordered a set of 3 just to have an extra. Got them in and went to set up my sizer. I will put in a bushing and then use a large pair of pliers to tighten it in the press so I can adjust the sizer till it kisses the shell holder on the up stroke. Well I started tightening the bushing and low and behold it just slipped over the slot with hardly any effort. did it again and didn't make any difference. tried another in the package, same story. So I wrote Hornandy about it. They apologized about this and set me another package of 3. Well they were better but they will not tighten to my level I want till they slip over.
I agree
Interesting observation . I never noticed this but that's likely because I went to the Redding competition shell holders shortly after buying the press and pretty much have always had contact with die and shell hold with cam over . The times I notice it most is when depriming with the Lee universal deprimer . That product does not need hard contact or cam over . Therefore it seems I don't get the benefit of that process you describe when depriming my cases
That is a scary concept for sure . I've not run into this as of yet and have bought multiple bushing for all the different cartridges I load for . None have had this issue "yet" . This makes me wonder if maybe you are having the die and shell holders making contact to hard/aggressively creating more stress on the female portion of the press then needed to accomplish the task . I make sure that contact is as minimal as possible while still insuring contiguous contact between die and shell holder through cam over .
When i was in the Navy.. it was so hard to get new Flight Deck boots, we were using this to keep the soles of the boots on!View attachment 1029897 View attachment 1029898
In the aerospace and aircraft maintenance workplace we safety wire things that might loosen. I’ve done this on my LNL progressive when I had the powder dispenser loosen. You use pliers you can get online and do it like shown. I just looked it through the locking bolt in the die ring. Works great.
Check it out . Looks like it could cost you nothing to fix the problem