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raythemanroe said:Leave the bushing out of the Forster.
raythemanroe said:Leave the bushing out of the Forster.
jonbearman said:Cant you leave the bushing out of your current die or is there no shoulder in the die?
raythemanroe said:I have the Forster bump die and after a few loading it needs full length sizing to feed well.. If I had to do it over I would have had Redding fit a die to my fire formed brass and went that route with a full length bushing die..
Grimstod said:Removing the bushing if you have a bushing die is also a really good idea. I would be inclined to go that rout.
They will make a the body die size them down that 1thou, thinking that's what you want, and you will have what you want(snug fit, zero yield).
Bump only.
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fguffey said:They will make a the body die size them down that 1thou, thinking that's what you want, and you will have what you want(snug fit, zero yield).
Bump only.
Report to moderator Logged
I can not bump the shoulder without case body support.
It goes inward, usually thick toward thin. Given that cases taper in thickness from webs all the way to mouths, brass thickness rolls upward to donut & eventually trimmed away(with heavy FL sizing). Not so much with a thou(after springback) of shoulder only bumping.brians356 said:how can the shoulder be set back when there is no place for the brass to go?
I don't believe this is adequate bumping. This is merely changing shoulder angle, while the shoulder-body junction would still be left in interference length. It would not take much force to do this.brians356 said:The brass can be compressed slightly at, and just behind, the neck-body junction to allow that, even though the body is not allowed to expand farther back.