I am a fan of LeWilson neck sizing dies and seaters only problem is they only make them for main stream calibres. In conjunction with my machinist friend at work I am now in possession of a set of neck and seating dies for all of the calibres I shoot including the mas36. the Lee Enfield .303 the AIA 7.62x39.
But even more interesting I have also got neck and seating dies and expanders for all my cast boolit calibres as well. I am using all of them with a arbor press sat on my computer desk. Load development is still under way as are fine tuning of the dies etc but this has opened up a whole new world of reloading for me. Great fun except the tooling is proving to be expensive. But all interesting stuff.
LeWilson type neck dies and seaters.
Moderator: dromia
Forum rules
All handloading data posted on Full-Bore UK from 23/2/2021 must reference the published pressure tested data it was sourced from, posts without such verification will be removed.
Any existing data without such a reference should be treated as suspect and not used.
Use reloading information posted here at your own risk. This forum (http://www.full-bore.co.uk) is not responsible for any property damage or personal injury as a consequence of using reloading data posted here, the information is individual members findings and observations only. Always verify the load data and be absolutely sure your firearm can handle the load, especially older ones. If in doubt start low and work your way up.
All handloading data posted on Full-Bore UK from 23/2/2021 must reference the published pressure tested data it was sourced from, posts without such verification will be removed.
Any existing data without such a reference should be treated as suspect and not used.
Use reloading information posted here at your own risk. This forum (http://www.full-bore.co.uk) is not responsible for any property damage or personal injury as a consequence of using reloading data posted here, the information is individual members findings and observations only. Always verify the load data and be absolutely sure your firearm can handle the load, especially older ones. If in doubt start low and work your way up.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests