@fguffey Are we talking semantics here? Bump shoulder back versus brass flow forward? At the end of the day, are we not achieving the same thing—a shorter case head to shoulder length?Good evening Guff,
I’m thinking I may be getting what you are saying. How is it possible to use a full length size die and move the shoulder back? For that to happen, the now compressed case walls and shortened “bumped” shoulder would have to move the brass.....where? Maybe another way of explaining this process is that the excess brass from the full length sizing & shortened shoulder moves brass to the inside of the case wall.
Think about it...
Ben
I think it flows forward. If you form cases from something longer, the neck really grows in length as the shoulder is moved shorter. The post number 24 also states this. MattGood evening Guff,
I’m thinking I may be getting what you are saying. How is it possible to use a full length size die and move the shoulder back? For that to happen, the now compressed case walls and shortened “bumped” shoulder would have to move the brass.....where? Maybe another way of explaining this process is that the excess brass from the full length sizing & shortened shoulder moves brass to the inside of the case wall.
Think about it...
Ben
So the bottom of neck just above the shoulder gets thicker or the case gets longer? Sounds like I need to spend more time with my mic.I think it flows forward. If you form cases from something longer, the neck really grows in length as the shoulder is moved shorter. The post number 24 also states this. Matt
So the bottom of neck just above the shoulder gets thicker or the case gets longer? Sounds like I need to spend more time with my mic.
Ben
It always grows longer. But if the case walls of the newly formed case are thicker, the shoulder gets thicker and so does the neck. MattSo the bottom of neck just above the shoulder gets thicker or the case gets longer? Sounds like I need to spend more time with my mic.
Ben
Thanks Bart, this is a perfect example of a picture is worth a 1000 words.Here's a good explanation of how fired case headspace changes when full length sized as much as possible:
http://thefiringline.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=85562&stc=1&d=1356646607
I'm the person those remarks are referring to.There are stories about shooters that have friends that have friends that have shot cases 45+ times; not a one of the shooters can tell me how much the case weighed when they started and when they finished. And, the stories are embellished with claims the friend of a friend did all of that with max. loads.
That attachment shows what ignorant people do when they cannot understand nor comprehend reality.
That attachment shows what ignorant people do when they cannot understand nor comprehend reality.
Decades ago, they were often called ignoratiolinguists. Some were eleemosynarys, too.
All I know about Frank Guffey is he lives in Texas and has quite different insights, compared to most others, to mechanical manipulations of rifle and ammo parts as they are made then slightly changed for any reason. For some reason, he doesn't explain his opinions' foundations to any level to support his claims. I think he is extremely unreasonable.Bart- do you know who guffey is? Im still trying to find somebody that does. He gets a bat signal when somebody has a reloading problem or theres a post with the keyword “headspace” pops up. He tells tales of rescuing these ignorant reloaders, lathe under his arm solving problems only he can yet ive never heard of anybody actually getting help.
I’m thinking I may be getting what you are saying.
It’s just semantics –
Let’s do a little test. Take your favorite sharpie and mark a perfect line around a fired case exactly at the shoulder. Resize the case using a F/L die and tell me where the line moves? I think this will confirm that the brass flows forward, which in essenence also bumps the shoulder back relative to it’s previous length. What is the argument here? Semantics correctness?
Let’s do a little test. Take your favorite sharpie and mark a perfect line around a fired case exactly at the shoulder. Resize the case using a F/L die and tell me where the line moves? I think this will confirm that the brass flows forward, which in essence also bumps the shoulder back relative to it’s previous length. What is the argument here? Semantics correctness?
I think this will confirm that the brass flows forward,