I purchased a few hundred once-rifed cases in search of something that works well but isn't so expensive that I mind leaving it on the ground at matches. The measured case capacity is a bit higher than my Federal brass that's nearing the end of its service life, and not unexpectedly the neck material is measurably thinner as well.
Given the same processing that the Federal brass receives with a .336 bushing the neck tension on the Hornady brass is inadequate for use in an autoloader. I'm assuming that a .334 bushing will solve the problem, but I'm wondering if I should run the necks through the .334 bushing as a second step or simply remove the expander ball from the decapping assembly on my FL die and just do it all in one pass. Logically it seems like I should hit the necks at least once with the expander so smooth out any internal irregularities, but I'm confident that someone with more experience can square me away here.
Given the same processing that the Federal brass receives with a .336 bushing the neck tension on the Hornady brass is inadequate for use in an autoloader. I'm assuming that a .334 bushing will solve the problem, but I'm wondering if I should run the necks through the .334 bushing as a second step or simply remove the expander ball from the decapping assembly on my FL die and just do it all in one pass. Logically it seems like I should hit the necks at least once with the expander so smooth out any internal irregularities, but I'm confident that someone with more experience can square me away here.