I'm new to the forum and I decided to start some conversations here because threads from this forum would often come up in search results when I was looking for knowledge.
I have been reloading on a progressive press for the last couple years. I had gone that path because I was reloading a higher volume of mostly handgun ammo. As I progressed, my revolver was showing signs of higher precision than I expected. I became OC in the details of reloading for it. Then both my sons pulled Mule Deer tags this year. That made me get into reloading a bottle-neck rifle cartridge. I am reloading that on the progressive press too, but I am looking at transitioning to a single stage press and I have questions about equipment and procedures.
I bought the deer rifle a couple years ago, but none of us won tags until this season. It's a bolt-action chambered for 6.5 Grendel. When I started reloading for it, I bought a Redding Type S Bushing Neck die, with the Redding Body die and Redding seater. The brass expands in the chamber to an OD of .300. That's the SAAMI spec. I have only Starline brass. I was using a bushing to squeeze it down in one step, and I was getting inconsistent diameters. Redding reports, "...a given neck sizing bushing will produce a case neck diameter that can be several thousandths of an inch smaller than the actual diameter of the bushing. This idiosyncrasy occurs when the neck diameter of the fired case is a great deal larger than the diameter of the neck sizing bushing, such as occurs when factory chambers are on the large side of the tolerance range and the brass is on the thin side. Typically, we have not noticed any problems until the case neck is reduced more than 0.008-0.010." Because I was trying to resize the neck 0.014", I was needing to use a bushing several thou larger and I would get inconsistent results. I bought a second bushing to do it in two-steps, but I guessed the size wrong and it doesn't give me enough neck tension. I also have some concerns about losing concentricity when resizing the neck so far without a mandrel on the ID. I bought a Lee Collet die and that's what I'm using on the necks for now.
What Concentricity Tool?
I need a concentricity gauge or tool. I just looked in my tool boxes and I don't even have a dial gauge. I found a couple odometers, but no dial gauge. I believe this is a necessity to check the concentricity of necks on cases and seated bullets on loaded cartridges. I'm leaning towards the Sinclair concentricity gauge. Is there a reason a different one is a better choice? I'm skeptical of the dial indicator they sell with it. Should I just get the fixture and buy a Starrett or Mitutoyo? Once I can measure this, I will see whether what I am doing on the necks is working, and whether the Redding seater is doing a satisfactory job or not.
Shoulder Bump Die or Not?
I have a bump gauge or comparator, but it turns out none of my dies move the shoulder. The LCD doesn't, and neither will the Type S Bushing Neck or Body-only die. Grendel is a low pressure cartridge (52,000psi) and it doesn't stretch or expand much even after several firings (so far there is no sign that I will ever need to trim). After 4 or 5 firings with neck-only sizing, I occasionally get a case that is harder to chamber and then I just run the cases through the body die. Will I ever need to move the shoulders? If I should resize the shoulder, which die should I use? Forster full-length and set it to bump 0.002"? I am sure this works well, but since I already have other good dies, I'm not just looking for a good way to do it, but for anything necessary that I'm neglecting and a solution to that. Erik Cortina thinks this is the biggest mistake in my current process. How do I not just fix it, but fix it in the best possible way?
I have been reloading on a progressive press for the last couple years. I had gone that path because I was reloading a higher volume of mostly handgun ammo. As I progressed, my revolver was showing signs of higher precision than I expected. I became OC in the details of reloading for it. Then both my sons pulled Mule Deer tags this year. That made me get into reloading a bottle-neck rifle cartridge. I am reloading that on the progressive press too, but I am looking at transitioning to a single stage press and I have questions about equipment and procedures.
I bought the deer rifle a couple years ago, but none of us won tags until this season. It's a bolt-action chambered for 6.5 Grendel. When I started reloading for it, I bought a Redding Type S Bushing Neck die, with the Redding Body die and Redding seater. The brass expands in the chamber to an OD of .300. That's the SAAMI spec. I have only Starline brass. I was using a bushing to squeeze it down in one step, and I was getting inconsistent diameters. Redding reports, "...a given neck sizing bushing will produce a case neck diameter that can be several thousandths of an inch smaller than the actual diameter of the bushing. This idiosyncrasy occurs when the neck diameter of the fired case is a great deal larger than the diameter of the neck sizing bushing, such as occurs when factory chambers are on the large side of the tolerance range and the brass is on the thin side. Typically, we have not noticed any problems until the case neck is reduced more than 0.008-0.010." Because I was trying to resize the neck 0.014", I was needing to use a bushing several thou larger and I would get inconsistent results. I bought a second bushing to do it in two-steps, but I guessed the size wrong and it doesn't give me enough neck tension. I also have some concerns about losing concentricity when resizing the neck so far without a mandrel on the ID. I bought a Lee Collet die and that's what I'm using on the necks for now.
What Concentricity Tool?
I need a concentricity gauge or tool. I just looked in my tool boxes and I don't even have a dial gauge. I found a couple odometers, but no dial gauge. I believe this is a necessity to check the concentricity of necks on cases and seated bullets on loaded cartridges. I'm leaning towards the Sinclair concentricity gauge. Is there a reason a different one is a better choice? I'm skeptical of the dial indicator they sell with it. Should I just get the fixture and buy a Starrett or Mitutoyo? Once I can measure this, I will see whether what I am doing on the necks is working, and whether the Redding seater is doing a satisfactory job or not.
Shoulder Bump Die or Not?
I have a bump gauge or comparator, but it turns out none of my dies move the shoulder. The LCD doesn't, and neither will the Type S Bushing Neck or Body-only die. Grendel is a low pressure cartridge (52,000psi) and it doesn't stretch or expand much even after several firings (so far there is no sign that I will ever need to trim). After 4 or 5 firings with neck-only sizing, I occasionally get a case that is harder to chamber and then I just run the cases through the body die. Will I ever need to move the shoulders? If I should resize the shoulder, which die should I use? Forster full-length and set it to bump 0.002"? I am sure this works well, but since I already have other good dies, I'm not just looking for a good way to do it, but for anything necessary that I'm neglecting and a solution to that. Erik Cortina thinks this is the biggest mistake in my current process. How do I not just fix it, but fix it in the best possible way?
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