Having a hell of a time with my Giraud trimmer. I had a bearing failure on the trimmer side and sent it back in. I'd trimmed less than 1,000 cases total at that point, 308, 5.56 and 300 blackout. I read the instructions, including how to clean it, and generally took very good care of it.
The bearing apparently had fine shavings in it which caused it to finally seize up. I never used compressed air and generally dumped out shavings and used a small brush to sweep out any excess. I was pretty careful.
Shortly after getting it back I began trimming again and followed instructions on a note they had included, asking me to be a bit more aggressive when inserting the case to trim and to just dump shavings. No need to get it completely clean. This would create larger brass shavings which would have a much harder time making their way into the bearing. I did just that and even worked up a special tool to hold the case as I was inserting it to be trimmed. Things overall were much smoother using this method but the bearing once again, began to make noise. Wasn't as frequent so I pressed on.
Today I did about 100 5.56 cases and moved on to some 300 blackout. Once again ran into issues, this time the cogged wheel on the trimmer side came loose on the shaft and it bogged while trimming a case. This damaged the cutter. The shaft on the trimmer side does not have a flat like it does on the motor side. The included grub screw which secures the cog to the shaft did not have enough purchase to keep the cog secured to the shaft and it also stripped the threads in the plastic cog. So the unit would end up bogging. On top of that, I'm getting a slight wobble to the cutter head which is probably being caused by the bearing going out yet again.
I do trim in a vertical position so the shavings fall down instead of back in the case. It's designed to be operated this way.
Anyone else have a lot of reliability issues with the Giraud? I'm likely purchasing a Dillon here soon and may just move to their trimmer. When the Giraud works, it's great but given how little I've used it at this point, I don't have much faith in its durability long-term.
I don't know if this is bad luck or that I'm just doing it wrong. Initially, I didn't jam the case in there and introduced it quite slowly. After the bearing rebuild, I was a bit more forceful and using my little tool to hold the case, it eliminated any extra movement from hand holding a case if that makes sense. It'd trim very smoothly with less noise/vibration. Seemed good. But with 300 Blackout, cut cases made out of LC 5.56, it just doesn't seem capable of processing a lot of brass without something going wrong.
The bearing apparently had fine shavings in it which caused it to finally seize up. I never used compressed air and generally dumped out shavings and used a small brush to sweep out any excess. I was pretty careful.
Shortly after getting it back I began trimming again and followed instructions on a note they had included, asking me to be a bit more aggressive when inserting the case to trim and to just dump shavings. No need to get it completely clean. This would create larger brass shavings which would have a much harder time making their way into the bearing. I did just that and even worked up a special tool to hold the case as I was inserting it to be trimmed. Things overall were much smoother using this method but the bearing once again, began to make noise. Wasn't as frequent so I pressed on.
Today I did about 100 5.56 cases and moved on to some 300 blackout. Once again ran into issues, this time the cogged wheel on the trimmer side came loose on the shaft and it bogged while trimming a case. This damaged the cutter. The shaft on the trimmer side does not have a flat like it does on the motor side. The included grub screw which secures the cog to the shaft did not have enough purchase to keep the cog secured to the shaft and it also stripped the threads in the plastic cog. So the unit would end up bogging. On top of that, I'm getting a slight wobble to the cutter head which is probably being caused by the bearing going out yet again.
I do trim in a vertical position so the shavings fall down instead of back in the case. It's designed to be operated this way.
Anyone else have a lot of reliability issues with the Giraud? I'm likely purchasing a Dillon here soon and may just move to their trimmer. When the Giraud works, it's great but given how little I've used it at this point, I don't have much faith in its durability long-term.
I don't know if this is bad luck or that I'm just doing it wrong. Initially, I didn't jam the case in there and introduced it quite slowly. After the bearing rebuild, I was a bit more forceful and using my little tool to hold the case, it eliminated any extra movement from hand holding a case if that makes sense. It'd trim very smoothly with less noise/vibration. Seemed good. But with 300 Blackout, cut cases made out of LC 5.56, it just doesn't seem capable of processing a lot of brass without something going wrong.