The old thinking cap has pretty much had it...How do you determine the size mandrel you would need?
..... snip...........doing a specific anneal to prevent the progression of work hardening and to keep the work hardening to a constant degree. That of course is easier said than done.............. snip......
I know that everyone likes to control neck tension with bushings but to me that doesn't seem like a very good way. From my way of thinking bushings transfer any variance in neck thickness to the inside of the neck where they have a direct impact on neck tension. That is not a good thing, because no matter how careful you are turning necks there will be variances, and those variances will impact neck tension.
I believe that the outside of the neck has minimal importance. The only important thing is how thick the necks are because that has an influence on spring-back. IMO the part of the neck everyone should be focusing on is the inside of the neck, or more appropriately inside diameter. The inside diameter is what influences neck tension, if one can transfer neck wall variances to the outside of the case it is that much better.
Regards
Joe
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One question Joe...How much is the die?
Great concept IMHO
And I would like to reverse aging, but that isn't going to happen is it?
Joe R,
I see you don't like PM's, would you give me an e-mail addy?
Thanks,
Lloyd
"Old age - it's the only disease you don't look forward to being cured of."
"Mr Bernstein" in "Citizen Kane"
Joe,
Why do you need the segmented collet? I assume the mandrel is expanding the neck, unlike in a Lee collet die. How does the collet contribute here?
Thats the whole reason i expand new brass with a mandrel, then neck turn it. Push the spots to the outside then turn em off.
A quick and easy solution is to take the beveled pin gauge and clamp it tightly in a collet puller (I have a Hornady) in the press....and presto (pun intended) you have a neck expansion die. The case float in the holder will allow for self centering. KISS principle.
I am sponsored by Holiday Inn Express.
Try again, mine went through. Check your PM more info there.
The collect shown gives a far greater range of mandrel that a Lee collet die can. The one shown has a range of .236-.275 and that covers me for my 260 AI, the one for a .308 has a range .275-.314, about 40Ks. For my Lake City brass I had to use a .3087 mandrel to expand the neck and because it is so hard and has so much snap back and I could still seat the bullet with ~20 pounds of seating pressure. So it is good to have a wide range.
Joe
As I understand it the collet is only used to hold the expander pin in perfect alignment with the die and to hold pins of different diameters within the range of the individual collet.What I was getting at was: How does the collet affect the neck? When you force the neck over the mandrel, does the outside of the neck also force the collet petals to open? And what's the benefit from that?
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As I understand it the collet is only used to hold the expander pin in perfect alignment with the die and to hold pins of different diameters within the range of the individual collet.
No, it is a "ER" type collet, once it is tightened.. it ain't going anywhere!When you force the neck over the mandrel, does the outside of the neck also force the collet petals to open?
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Drat, Foiled again Batman....I had tried this option in the past, but I couldn't consistently get the mandrel perfectly straight so I ended up with some crooked and some ruined necks. Originally a Hornady collet and a Lee universal decapping die were what I wanted to use as models, but when Kenny showed his collet I knew right there it was far superior to those.
Kindest regards,
Joe
As I understand it the collet is only used to hold the expander pin in perfect alignment with the die and to hold pins of different diameters within the range of the individual collet.