9mm is smaller, not larger, than .40.
They take more effort because they have more of a case taper, that's all.
Oops, brain fart!
9mm is smaller, not larger, than .40.
They take more effort because they have more of a case taper, that's all.
"...more effort because they have more of a case taper..." Not enough to notice.
Clean the lube off before shooting. How it's done isn't important.
lee lube dries, and shouldn't be an issue if used as directed.
Never tried saskgunowner101 's suggestion but it sounds good.
Would a tumble not change the shape of the powder grains and therefore burn rate and velocity?
Just asking...
No...
Leaving lube on the cases makes them a) pickup dirt b) not grip the chamber walls, possibly a bad thing. It's certainly a bad thing in some calibres where I've seen significantly-increase pressure signs on the base of the case (pressure marks from the bolt) when lube is left on.What problem are we trying to solve here anyway?
I use carbide pistol dies and lube nothing.
I use carbide pistol dies and lube nothing.
if I loaded that way I'd shoot about 1000 rounds a year, instead of 1000+ a week.