CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Moderator: dromia
Forum rules
Should your post be in Grumpy Old Men? This area is for general shooting related posts only please.
Should your post be in Grumpy Old Men? This area is for general shooting related posts only please.
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
...or decap separately with a universal decapping die for about a tenner.
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Thanksovenpaa wrote:You mean the pin that ejects the primer? I have some spares if you need one. I would stop with Forster myself.ANDY T wrote:Hi
I have just snapped my pin so looks like i will have to buy a new die any recommendations as to what would be the best die to go for that want cause me any problems
Andy
But Im of to my gun shop for a new die, will the cases i have done be ok to shoot.
Andy
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Andy,
I'm probably going to get roasted for this..........
Lee dies. There will be calls of "They are cheap and nasty, difficult to use, blah, blah, blah......." But, I believe, nothing beats them in turning out fantastic ammunition.
In the pistol days I always used RCBS, purely because that's what my local shop stocked. When I started seriously with rifles, I again used RCBS. However, I had problems when looking for .38-55 RCBS dies. CAS was still in it's infancy so very few companys made dies for the old western calibres.
Fast forward to Reigs Gun Shop on South Orange Blossom Trail in Orlando. Got talking with the propriator whilst looking for dies. He suggested Lee and I turned my nose up. He gave that smile that old fellas give someone when they are about to teach them.....
Paraphrased; "They may not look pretty, they come in a cheap box with other cheap things like the dipper, but, they guarantee the best internal finish of any manufactured die and guarantee to make the most accurate ammunition, with less run out than any other die maker."
"So? Anyone could make those claims" Now this is the bit that first convinced me to try them...... "Now this is the US where you can sue anyone because you tripped over your own shoes laces and get millions. Lee's competition took Lee at their word and measured, tested, measured again and compared them to their own. Lee didn't get sued. Reloading is huge in the US and billions of dollars are at stake. Not only did Lee not get sued, the other makers shut up because Lee's claims are true. In fact, some ammo makers use Lee dies in their commercial machines."
Some of Lee's stuff is crap. Their "perfect" powder measure and scales, I do not like or trust. Other Lee kit is outstanding like their hand and cast presses or autoprime. But their dies, really are the best in the industry for turning out ammunition. They'll not win a beauty contest or ease of use competition, but once learned and mastered, you'll not go back to any other.......
I'm probably going to get roasted for this..........
Lee dies. There will be calls of "They are cheap and nasty, difficult to use, blah, blah, blah......." But, I believe, nothing beats them in turning out fantastic ammunition.
In the pistol days I always used RCBS, purely because that's what my local shop stocked. When I started seriously with rifles, I again used RCBS. However, I had problems when looking for .38-55 RCBS dies. CAS was still in it's infancy so very few companys made dies for the old western calibres.
Fast forward to Reigs Gun Shop on South Orange Blossom Trail in Orlando. Got talking with the propriator whilst looking for dies. He suggested Lee and I turned my nose up. He gave that smile that old fellas give someone when they are about to teach them.....
Paraphrased; "They may not look pretty, they come in a cheap box with other cheap things like the dipper, but, they guarantee the best internal finish of any manufactured die and guarantee to make the most accurate ammunition, with less run out than any other die maker."
"So? Anyone could make those claims" Now this is the bit that first convinced me to try them...... "Now this is the US where you can sue anyone because you tripped over your own shoes laces and get millions. Lee's competition took Lee at their word and measured, tested, measured again and compared them to their own. Lee didn't get sued. Reloading is huge in the US and billions of dollars are at stake. Not only did Lee not get sued, the other makers shut up because Lee's claims are true. In fact, some ammo makers use Lee dies in their commercial machines."
Some of Lee's stuff is crap. Their "perfect" powder measure and scales, I do not like or trust. Other Lee kit is outstanding like their hand and cast presses or autoprime. But their dies, really are the best in the industry for turning out ammunition. They'll not win a beauty contest or ease of use competition, but once learned and mastered, you'll not go back to any other.......
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Yes they will be fine to shoot with.ANDY T wrote:Thanks
But Im of to my gun shop for a new die, will the cases i have done be ok to shoot.
Andy
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
There's a lot to be said for the collet concept (sizing the inside against a mandrel), and plenty of [highly experienced] people who favour the Lee collet dies over any other. In fact, I'd been thinking of starting a thread to talk about about collet vs bushing neck dies at some point.Sim G wrote:Andy,
I'm probably going to get roasted for this..........
I've heard of adjusting neck tension by grinding the mandrel, but is there any way to adjust how much of the neck gets sized?
I'd love to see a Redding collet die with sliding alignment whatsit - are Lee the only ones who make collet dies?
..
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
I have a Lee Challenger press with a Lee bullet seater permanently set up on a corner of the bench for building '600m plinking' rounds for my AI. That cheap press and die never fails to produce some of the most consistent ammunition I have ever built. The press and a set of .308 dies cost under GBP20 second hand. A far cry from the GBP240ish I have just stumped up for a set of Redding does in 6.5-284Sim G wrote:Andy,
I'm probably going to get roasted for this..........
Lee dies. There will be calls of "They are cheap and nasty, difficult to use, blah, blah, blah......." But, I believe, nothing beats them in turning out fantastic ammunition.
In the pistol days I always used RCBS, purely because that's what my local shop stocked. When I started seriously with rifles, I again used RCBS. However, I had problems when looking for .38-55 RCBS dies. CAS was still in it's infancy so very few companys made dies for the old western calibres.
Fast forward to Reigs Gun Shop on South Orange Blossom Trail in Orlando. Got talking with the propriator whilst looking for dies. He suggested Lee and I turned my nose up. He gave that smile that old fellas give someone when they are about to teach them.....
Paraphrased; "They may not look pretty, they come in a cheap box with other cheap things like the dipper, but, they guarantee the best internal finish of any manufactured die and guarantee to make the most accurate ammunition, with less run out than any other die maker."
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Get is started, it will be interesting to see what people think.rox wrote:There's a lot to be said for the collet concept (sizing the inside against a mandrel), and plenty of [highly experienced] people who favour the Lee collet dies over any other. In fact, I'd been thinking of starting a thread to talk about about collet vs bushing neck dies at some point.Sim G wrote:Andy,
I'm probably going to get roasted for this..........
I've heard of adjusting neck tension by grinding the mandrel, but is there any way to adjust how much of the neck gets sized?
I'd love to see a Redding collet die with sliding alignment whatsit - are Lee the only ones who make collet dies?
..
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Crying out loud Dave!!! That's ten sets of Lee dies! And, they offer a custom die service for about 100 quid.ovenpaa wrote: A far cry from the GBP240ish I have just stumped up for a set of Redding does in 6.5-284
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
Maybe it's better that we never know that our GBP 200+ die sets are no better (or worse still, worse) than the 20 quid Lee offering.ovenpaa wrote:Get is started, it will be interesting to see what people think.
..
Re: CASE NECK SIZING PROBLEM
I've not used the service, but the Lee site says $60 (presumably plus postage) for custom set comprising a neck sizing die and bullet seater die. That can't be much more than their off-the-shelf dies cost here!Sim G wrote:Crying out loud Dave!!! That's ten sets of Lee dies! And, they offer a custom die service for about 100 quid.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests