I have a Dillon 650 that I put a Mr BulletFeeder on. After setting everything up like I have a million times before, I start running the loading toolhead consisting of:
- Neck die (already FL size on the prep/trim toolhead)
- Powder
- Mr BulletFeeder dropper
- Seating Die
- Crimp
Almost right away I saw the bullets (55g FMJ, boat tails) rocking their way off the cases when they were dropped. A good 1/3 just flew off. I've done the whole smoothing the indexing 'upgrade' as well as got the springs and washers that help smooth the rotation of the plate; its not that, as I never have this issue otherwise.
Googling this, it seems to be a common thing with 223 and MrBulletFeeder. They even address it on their site and say you probably need a Lyman M die to open up the neck area for the bullet to sit itself inside the neck instead of riding on top of it and getting knocked off. I did a quick look at the M die and it seems like its just a 'one size fits all' mandrel for a single caliber; is this correct?
I'm assuming that you can use it to set the desired neck tension like I am doing with the neck sizing die in Station 1 just like with a mandrel, but here is where I get confused. How would you set the actual tension you want, and how does it do this in conjunction with flaring out the neck a little; wouldn't this cause run out, or how is this designed to work?
The directions I saw for the M die were very brief. It was basically screw it in until you get the amount of flare on the neck you want - well, its a rifle case, I dont wany ANY flare because again, doesn't this cause all sorts of neck tension inconsistencies and run out?
- Neck die (already FL size on the prep/trim toolhead)
- Powder
- Mr BulletFeeder dropper
- Seating Die
- Crimp
Almost right away I saw the bullets (55g FMJ, boat tails) rocking their way off the cases when they were dropped. A good 1/3 just flew off. I've done the whole smoothing the indexing 'upgrade' as well as got the springs and washers that help smooth the rotation of the plate; its not that, as I never have this issue otherwise.
Googling this, it seems to be a common thing with 223 and MrBulletFeeder. They even address it on their site and say you probably need a Lyman M die to open up the neck area for the bullet to sit itself inside the neck instead of riding on top of it and getting knocked off. I did a quick look at the M die and it seems like its just a 'one size fits all' mandrel for a single caliber; is this correct?
I'm assuming that you can use it to set the desired neck tension like I am doing with the neck sizing die in Station 1 just like with a mandrel, but here is where I get confused. How would you set the actual tension you want, and how does it do this in conjunction with flaring out the neck a little; wouldn't this cause run out, or how is this designed to work?
The directions I saw for the M die were very brief. It was basically screw it in until you get the amount of flare on the neck you want - well, its a rifle case, I dont wany ANY flare because again, doesn't this cause all sorts of neck tension inconsistencies and run out?