So wrong.Why wouldn't just pushing on the handle creating the force to start the case ito the die remove all of the clearance in the lnkage? Beyond that it seems you are bending something. The clearances are air gaps! No force required.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
So wrong.Why wouldn't just pushing on the handle creating the force to start the case ito the die remove all of the clearance in the lnkage? Beyond that it seems you are bending something. The clearances are air gaps! No force required.
We arrived at the amount of time in the flames of the annealer that gave that result, while preserving enough hardness in the neck so that heavy bullets loaded in magnums, fed from magazines did not move. The press was a Forster B2, Later we found that the problem returned after a couple of firings, which indicated that, going forward, we would have to anneal every other firing to keep the bump uniform. The first time we tried cases, the anneal was not enough. We added a second to the dwell time in the flames and got what we were looking for.Cool you disagree.
Tell us HOW you were able to get your .001”( or half that) variance.
I will say no more until you EXPLAIN what you did.
Why wouldn't just pushing on the handle creating the force to start the case ito the die remove all of the clearance in the lnkage? Beyond that it seems you are bending something. The clearances are air gaps! No force required.
BoydAllen.
That doesn’t explain diddly squat as to how you sized the brass.
Anyway, never mind, I have no interest in what you to have to say.
Ever heard of a short chamber and a long die?
Doesn’t matter, ignore list you go.
This is a case of speculation vs. experience. Toggling produces more consistent bump, but in some cases it is not an absolute requirement. I have done a lot of testing. If the brass is not to thick and/or springy and was uniformly annealed during manufacturing you can have consistent bump without it. For most brass that I have tried it does. That is the reason for the Redding competition shell holder sets. They allow the user to get toggle with a range of die settings, as long as you do not need a shorter than standard holder. Another thing that complicates die setting is that as brass is fired and FL sized more and more, it becomes more work hardened, so that the same setting will not give the same result.So wrong.
Just put him on the ignore list. Sometimes you have to know your audience and i dont think hes done his research.This is a case of speculation vs. experience. Toggling produces more consistent bump, but in some cases it is not an absolute requirement. I have done a lot of testing. If the brass is not to thick and/or springy and was uniformly annealed during manufacturing you can have consistent bump without it. For most brass that I have tried it does. That is the reason for the Redding competition shell holder sets. They allow the user to get toggle with a range of die settings, as long as you do not need a shorter than standard holder. Another thing that complicates die setting is that as brass is fired and FL sized more and more, it becomes more work hardened, so that the same setting will not give the same result.
NO... I like him where he is. LOLCan we get an expert like Guffey to chime in... Lol...
Those instructions have always been wrong, assuming you want to get any sort of decent brass life, and that your rifle does not have absolutely minimum headspace. One of the problems that I can run into when trying to help someone upgrade his die setting skills it that he may think that factory instructions came down from Mt. Sinai on stone tablets.That kinda throws a monkey wrench into the generic instructions provided by the manufacturers of screwing a die to full contact then increase by 1/4 turn.
If you can't get the brass sized to your liking, try a mod on the shell holder.Here are the facts. Camming over is the ONLY way to get consistent shoulder bump...and no, it doesn’t ‘stress’ the linkage, it’s designed to do this.
Oh well, I guess that I will just have to suffer through. You asked me a rather general question and I gave the information that I thought that you were looking for. If you wanted other details, you should have just asked and I would have told you.BoydAllen.
That doesn’t explain diddly squat as to how you sized the brass.
Anyway, never mind, I have no interest in what you to have to say.
Ever heard of a short chamber and a long die?
Doesn’t matter, ignore list you go.
Dont feed the troll boyd.Oh well, I guess that I will just have to suffer through. You asked me a rather general question and I gave the information that I thought that you were looking for. If you wanted other details, you should have just asked and I would have told you.
Excellent advice.If you can't get the brass sized to your liking, try a mod on the shell holder.
Chuck one upside down in a drill press and run it down on an "oiled sharpening stone". Comes out looking like it was factory made AND works like a champ!!
Measure first and when you've taken the right amount off, mark it so it doesn't get mixed up with a standard/non modified shell holder.
MUCH easier than trying to modify a die. And shell holders are ea$ier to replace than die$.