$20 Power Trimmer

jethunter

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Here is a little trick I just learned that really turns the LEE case trimmer into a speed machine. Probably some of you clever guys already do this but it was new to me.

I needed to trim five hundred 32-20 brass about 0.30" inches each as part of the process to make 8mm Lebel Revolver brass. That would be a lot of work on my Lyman hand trimmer.

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The Lee trimmer is made to have the shell holder mounted in the drill chuck. You still have to hold the cutter by hand if you do that and it's tiring and not real fast. I decided to try something different. I put the cutter in my drill press chuck and mounted the shell holder on the table like this:

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The cutter fits in the chuck nicely and is suprisingly concentric with decent run out.

The shellholder lock nut is fixed to a piece of flat iron clamped to the drill press table. It worked like a charm and I trimmed 500 brass in less than 2.5 hours. That is smoking fast.

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Here are some closeups of the shell holder mounting. It is bolted to a piece of 1" x 6" x 1/8" flat iron.

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I threaded the shellholder shank to 1/4" x 20 TPI (1/4" National Coarse). The shank was slightly oversize and had to be filed down some to allow the threading die to work on it. The hole in the flat iron is 1/4". You need to use a 3/8" flat washer as shown to make the holder sit flat and straight.

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For setting the cutting depth you would normally go with the length of the pilot, but LEE does not make a pilot for the 8mm Lebel Revolver cartridge so I cut off a 32-20 pilot and set the depth by adjusting the table height with the drill fully extended. Then I centered the shellholder / flat iron on the table and clamped it down. Then I made the final depth adjustments by moving the cutter in the chuck so that with the drill fully extended it was set to cut the brass to the right length.

It works pretty smooth. The shell holder is fast release and fairly easy to do 3-4 brass per minute once you have everything set up. I tried various speeds - 1100-1200 RPM cut the cleanest. The cutter still looks good after cutting 150 inches of brass.

Total cost:
Flat iron: $6 for a 3 ft long piece at canadian Tire
LEE cutter and shellholder lock: $6
LEE shellholder and pilot: $6

The drill press itself is a $80 mini press from Canadian Tire a couple years ago. Every hardware store on the planet sells the same machine with their own decal on it.

Each new caliber would cost $6 for a shellholder and pilot.
 
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I used a tubing cutter to shorten a big batch of cases. Then I finished trimmed them with a Lee case length cutter with a wooden ball and the Lee Zip Trimmer. Lots of chips and job done!
 
After looking at the different Lee trimmer available and not finding one that was easy to modify for the 8mm Lebel I did 100 using a Forester trimmer with an electric screwdriver for powder. Does the job but not as quick and easy as Jethunters rig.

I'll have to remember this trick as I have more brass coming and a bunch of 11X18mm French ordanence to make too.

Thanks for sharing!
 
I used a tubing cutter to shorten a big batch of cases. Then I finished trimmed them with a Lee case length cutter with a wooden ball and the Lee Zip Trimmer. Lots of chips and job done!

I like using tubing cutters on smaller jobs. You have to cut the cases long and finish the job in a trimmer, which doubles the handling steps. That method takes about 2 minutes for me to trim one case, so trimming 500 cases would take me 16 hours compared to 2.5 hours on the drill press.
 
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I use the cutter in press drill but I just insert the shellholder in a screwdriver. Then just push up on cutter. That way I don't have to lower the press drill, and it's faster.

(for your specific trimming I understand that you had to do this though).
 
I went one step further. Instead of having the shell holder mounted to the drill press base I simply removed the drill chuck from an old cordless drill that was broken. So now in my left hand I hold the chuck with the shell holder on it, slip in the shell and push it up into the drill press that is turning at it's lowest speed. I can do a lot of brass in a short amount of time this way.
 
Been using this setup for some time now and still quite pleased with it. The only improvement I've discovered was to use a drop of RCBS "Case Lube 2" on a q-tip and lube the case neck inside and out before trimming - the cutter stays cooler and it does a cleaner job. It doesn't take much lube - 1 drop is good for 20-30 cases.
 
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Been using this setup for some time now and still quite pleased with it. The only improvement I've discovered was to use a drop of RCBS "Case Lube 2" on a q-tip and lube the case neck inside and out before trimming - the cutter stays cooler and it does a cleaner job. It doesn't take much lube - 1 drop is good for 20-30 cases.

If you lube inside your case necks before sizing, the residual lube should do the job. Doesn't everyone neck lube?

Just watched the video (see post #12) of the guy who modified the Lee cutter for the RCBS case prep centre. All I could think of was how much neck runout he was introducing with that wobbly setup.
 
If you lube inside your case necks before sizing, the residual lube should do the job. Doesn't everyone neck lube?...

Not in this instance. In those pictures I'm trimming 1F 32-20 brass in preparation to form it into 8mm Lebel Revolver; the brass is straight walled pistol brass which doesn't normally need to be lubed for resizing: and it hasn't been resized yet. BUT - the residual lube from trimming IS very beneficial when expanding the neck AFTER it is trimmed. So you were close. :)

In situation where you were trimming bottleneck rifle cases that have already been resized the residual lube might be sufficient.
 
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