jepp2
Gold $$ Contributor
Found the book by Brennan. $150
A product of being out of print and high demand. I bought mine new from Amazon for around $22 many years ago.
Found the book by Brennan. $150
Not sure what you mean by unsupported, the die is supported by your press, and I would want the mandrel itself floating a bit from there(my Sinclair does). Your tension, lower/consistent as annealed, should be declared to you by your load/barrel testing.The real questions I have at this point are: 1] Will the neck concentricity be effected by the unsupported " mandrel die"? 2] How often will cases need to be annealed to off-set differing amounts of spring-back? My limited testing seems to lean towards annealing after every firing. By the 3rd firing, there seems to be no difference between results. 3] Is it worth the extra equipment and added steps involved?
You can adjust tension with a neck bushing. That is, length of your downsizing(not diameter reduction).
I don't see how you would adjust tension with an expansion mandrel, as these are difficult to partial length expand with.
Let's say you have .300" of seated bullet bearing. You could adjust the length area of spring back against that bearing. Reasonable would be ~.125 to.300 bushing sized length. That is the area you choose to grip that bearing, regardless of pre-seating/expansion.
For way higher tension, you could size more length of the neck, putting spring back in a bind against bearing/base junction. But this will greatly increase tension variance, especially where bringing donut area into that tension. This is useful for underbores running extreme pressure loads, that take them deep into diminished returns(which is also diminished variance). No good for LR capacities, as these will be affected by tension variance.
Pre-seating(mandrel expansion) is useful to drive thickness variance outward away from seating bullet bearing. It also reduces seating forces for better precision in CBTO. I built a loadcell into my Sinclair mandrel die for measuring pre-seating forces. This provides opportunities for me to adjust neck sizing lengths as needed to match these forces. While my necks have a consistent carbon layer(friction coefficient), seating forces correlate, comparatively, with tension.
That's the best I can do, but it's still important to understand that nothing about this directly indicates actual tension. There is still diametric area(cal), and gripping geometries that influence the forces needed to release a bullet.
.250" length of full spring back gripping a bullet, is more in 30cal than 22cal, and 40deg shoulders hold a neck hoop tighter than 20deg shoulders, etc.
Expansion mandrel use plays no role in this.