…grrr… having some funky stuff going on with seating the new Federal Trophy bonded bullet and the Forster micrometer seating die.
It seems as though the bullet is “sticking” to the seating stem with a “snap” back type of action when the ram is returning down to remove the seated bullet.
Anyone have issues seating this bullet in general? I don’t know the type of coating the bullet has…I’ll say it’s a nickel type finish for those of you familiar with these…but I don’t know otherwise.
Tried the following
- Forster recommends after bottoming out the die after full spring compression, 1 full rotation back. Tried 2 full rotations, then a third. No avail.
- To test, tried dipping the bullet (after seated long) with the graphite Redding dry lube to see if the bullet would not stick…seating depth approached target but the snap back action on the press remained
Other points
- Using the Hornady comparator tool, completed round seems to be difficult to rotate in the tool, also observed as “sticky.”
- Other bullets like Sierra’s don’t have a problem, Nosler Accubond’s have this happen 10% of the time. These trophy bonded it’s like 90% of the time.
- Measured diameter of the trophy’s and the Accubond and Sierra’s don’t differ… in otherwords the bullets appear consistent as far as measurables.
I have had trouble with this die and sent it back for Forster for repair previously. I switched to a micrometer adjust seater so that when I switch bullets I can just dial it up and go and with the reported improved concentricity.
Forster by the reviews I’ve read, is very well respected… but I am going to be honest and express my frustrations. Outside of SMK’s there’s been variation and I can’t nail down whether it’s this tool, bullet variation, or brass prep out of whack that that doesn’t seem to be measurable… I am a guy that's into process. Once it's set, measuring every time should disappear when proven, and with this seater I just can't get there and it's driving me nuts.
If this tool is just for the bench rest guys then let me know that too. I’m not trying to shoot the eyeballs out of a gnat but just achieve some bullet seating repeatability. For me what’s acceptable is set point plus or minus 2 thou, with 75% at set point. With this arrangement creating dummy rounds to achieve set point is not an issue, but after primer and powder 75% are 8 thou long.
Apologies for the long read, for those of you that respond…thanks…I am at the end of my rope without some help. If I just need to chill, get away from the bench and pour a drink...then so be it.
Regards
Ronr
GIVENS:
- 7mm-08, Savage bolt.
- Lapua brass 5 x fired ( annealed, shoulder bumped with Redding shoulder bump die and neck turned at 3x )
- 5th season reloading
- Lee challenger breech lock press
- Lee neck collet
It seems as though the bullet is “sticking” to the seating stem with a “snap” back type of action when the ram is returning down to remove the seated bullet.
Anyone have issues seating this bullet in general? I don’t know the type of coating the bullet has…I’ll say it’s a nickel type finish for those of you familiar with these…but I don’t know otherwise.
Tried the following
- Forster recommends after bottoming out the die after full spring compression, 1 full rotation back. Tried 2 full rotations, then a third. No avail.
- To test, tried dipping the bullet (after seated long) with the graphite Redding dry lube to see if the bullet would not stick…seating depth approached target but the snap back action on the press remained
Other points
- Using the Hornady comparator tool, completed round seems to be difficult to rotate in the tool, also observed as “sticky.”
- Other bullets like Sierra’s don’t have a problem, Nosler Accubond’s have this happen 10% of the time. These trophy bonded it’s like 90% of the time.
- Measured diameter of the trophy’s and the Accubond and Sierra’s don’t differ… in otherwords the bullets appear consistent as far as measurables.
I have had trouble with this die and sent it back for Forster for repair previously. I switched to a micrometer adjust seater so that when I switch bullets I can just dial it up and go and with the reported improved concentricity.
Forster by the reviews I’ve read, is very well respected… but I am going to be honest and express my frustrations. Outside of SMK’s there’s been variation and I can’t nail down whether it’s this tool, bullet variation, or brass prep out of whack that that doesn’t seem to be measurable… I am a guy that's into process. Once it's set, measuring every time should disappear when proven, and with this seater I just can't get there and it's driving me nuts.
If this tool is just for the bench rest guys then let me know that too. I’m not trying to shoot the eyeballs out of a gnat but just achieve some bullet seating repeatability. For me what’s acceptable is set point plus or minus 2 thou, with 75% at set point. With this arrangement creating dummy rounds to achieve set point is not an issue, but after primer and powder 75% are 8 thou long.
Apologies for the long read, for those of you that respond…thanks…I am at the end of my rope without some help. If I just need to chill, get away from the bench and pour a drink...then so be it.
Regards
Ronr
GIVENS:
- 7mm-08, Savage bolt.
- Lapua brass 5 x fired ( annealed, shoulder bumped with Redding shoulder bump die and neck turned at 3x )
- 5th season reloading
- Lee challenger breech lock press
- Lee neck collet
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