Hornady ELD-X

RedRyder

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Full Member
Minuteman
Feb 22, 2013
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I've been reloading 6.5mm 143g ELD-X bullets and I've found it very difficult to maintain a consistent length to ogive. I use a comparator attached to my calipers which enables me to measure from case head to bullet ogive - which is typically a more accurate way of measuring. As a little background, I'm using a Redding competition micro-adjustable seating die and I'm constantly adjusting the die in order to achieve the 2.869' measurement I've established for this rifle. Has anyone else found a lot of variation with the ELD-Xs?
 
Have you measured the ogive on the bullets only to see if there consistent?
Is the tip of the bullet hitting the seating plug in your die?
 
The tip is not hitting the seater plug. Though I do see a ring around the circumference of every bullet about a 1/8" down from the tip. I haven't tried measuring the ogive on each bullet.
 
I have the same Redding Dies and have the same problem. I adjust the Die setting depth every time. so I end up running each round through the die twice. I usually back it off so I don't seat it all the way and measure then make the fine adjustments based off of the first measurement. it is a pain in the ass but it sure does produce consistent results and at the end of the day I know that is not factor in my shooting. (I am that factor 99.9% of the time). I am fairly new to reloading (4 years) and that is how I have always done it. By the way I have had the same problem with Sierra 175's Berger 105's Hybrid and Berger 140's VLD Hybrid and VLD's.

Mxpilot
 
You're gonna need a VLD stem from Redding OR you can polish up your current one.

thats what I did; took some polishing compound, chuck it to a drill, then cleaned up with 0000 steel wool.

No rings, no sticks and consistent seating now
 
No, I don't anneal for that caliber.

As far as Rob01's question - if I understand it correctly, it can vary dramatically. I can be sailing along smoothly at 2.689 and then it will start to vary by -.010 more or less. Typically, I've then got to use a bullet extractor (I use the hammer like extractor) to pound the bullets out of the case so I can re-seat them.
 
I'll second the VLD seating stem. That thing is the tits! I seat 130 HVLDs to the .001 every single time, from start to finish. Last batch I did was 100 rounds. I checked the base to ogive on number 1 and 2 then went to town. I only checked number 100 at the end and it was the exact same. Just to make sure I went and spot checked about ten more and every one was where it needed to be.


FWIW I use it in Redding dies as well







Sierracharlie338....
 
No, I don't anneal for that caliber.

As far as Rob01's question - if I understand it correctly, it can vary dramatically. I can be sailing along smoothly at 2.689 and then it will start to vary by -.010 more or less. Typically, I've then got to use a bullet extractor (I use the hammer like extractor) to pound the bullets out of the case so I can re-seat them.

There is definitely something wrong if you are seating fine and then are off .010". You can have some bullet ogives vary +/- .002 but being off .010 consistently after the seating depth is set isn't right.
 
I looked on Brownell's website and they offer two 6.5mm stems. A standard size and a larger than standard size which is 3/16' longer. The Brownells guy told me that the standard size is designed for longer magnum cases like 300s or 264s. So I ordered a standard size. Will report results when possible.
 
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