Ya know,,it seems to me that by the time I bought the die and five bushings, I had quite a bit of money tied up for sub standard results.
I tried numbers up, down, loose, tight, with/without expander ball. Even tried tightening the bushing with the case in place. No Joy.
I have not tried the mandrel method yet, and don't know if I will.
It seems to me that the combination of neck turning and a honed die will give the most consistent and accurate results with the least working of the case.
Anyway, that is what I am trying now. I'll let y'all know how it works when I get my die back from Forster, and if that doesn't work out well I guess the next step is a custom die for my rifle, which will probably be the most cost efficient way to go and what I probably should have done to begin with.
I feel the exact same way. With all the money spent for bushings and the die, the results are sub-standard.
Here is what I have done to try and get better concentricity using the Redding S die and bushing (the concentricity was usually .001 after firing, then after the die the concentricity was worst).
1. Examined my reloader. Thinking the parts were worn out, Dillon replaced (for free) all the cams in the machine. This did not help.
2. Borrowed my neighbors single stage RCBS Rock Chucker press, thinking a single stage press had more of a center axis. This did not help.
3. Tried using the bushings with numbers side up, then down. This did not help.
4. Tried altering the die pressure on the bushing (instructions say all the way down then turn back to allow the bushing too float). This did not help.
5. Changed lubes from Dillon to Imperial Wax. This did not help. Cost $7.00
6. Placed an O-Ring under the FL die so the die "floats." This did not help. Cost $2.00
7. Thoroughly cleaned the inside and outside of the brass (SS Media Tumbler) before using the S die. This did not help.
8. My buddy, who has the same set-up exactly, tried annealing. This did not help. Cost my buddy $50.00 for the annealer, but he made his own.
9. Called Redding. I was trying everything they said and some of what I did they suggested. This did not help.
10. Turned the necks. This did not help.....maybe a tad (.001 better or so, but still didn't do much). Cost me $200 for the K & M tool.
11. Reamed the inside of the necks. This did not help......maybe a tad (.001 better or so, but still didn't do much). Cost my buddy $200 for this set-up.
12. Took out the expander ball. .....This did not help.
13. Purchased a Redding carbide expander ball and replaced the steel expander ball that comes with the die. This did not help. Cost me $35.00.
14. Purchased Lapua brass. While the concentricity was near perfect after firing, once the Redding die got to the brass, the concentricity was again worst.
Now, I am on my last attempt. I purchased a Lee Collett Neck Sizing die. Others have said this has worked. I'll find out tomorrow, but it's another $30.00 chasing this concentricity with this Redding die.
If the Lee works, I'll use the Redding die
without the bushings for shoulder bump only when needed (every 3-4 firings), and use the Lee die after each firing for neck tension only.