Hey guys...I really appreciate the feedback on my other thread (.223 groundhogs) and thought your collective experience might be able to help me wade through my first real hiccup in re-loading. In the interest of full disclosure, I consider my budget to be a fairly modest one but NOT wanting to compromise too much, I've been rounding-up the gear over some time...and feel I'm withing striking range to actually be in production soon. So, with that in mind, let me tell you what I have, what I'm TRYING to do, and what seems to be going wrong. If I haven't lost you already, read-on! 
My goal is to develop a great load for varmint hunting, groundhogs mostly...but for it to print well and really help me stretch the limits of how far I can take a poke at these big buggers. I took a "Hail Mary" shot at one more than 400 yards away last summer and while I don't own a range finder (will be correcting that too) it got me thinking that a shot like that should be possible. (I missed it...3 times
) Anyhow, the gun is a Savage Precision 10 with a 1:9" twist, 20" barrel. To the point of this thread..
In my research, .223 case length should be 1.75" but I'm wondering...how critical is that what tolerances do you guys try to achieve? With the dent in the primer caps, I thought it best to size the cases (RCBS Partner press, RCBS FL .223 dies), pop-out the primer caps and THEN measure. Brass is all once-fired Hornady, mostly loaded with 55gr. V-Max. I took some sample measurements to show you how what the sizing looked like after that process;
1.751"
1.745"
1.7435"
1.7455"
1.749"
1.747"
1.7525"
1.753"
1.749"
1.747"
Naturally...being wet behind the ears...I thought GREAT, I can try my new LEE trimmer on the long ones! This is what was recommended to me;
http://www.midwayusa.com/product/476992/lee-case-trimmer-cutter-and-lock-stud
http://www.midwayusa.com/product/107333/lee-case-length-gage-and-shellholder-223-remington
The case length gauge threads into the case trimmer/cutter, the case slides over it...that little pin protrudes into the primer pocket and (presumably) bottoms-out once the trimmer has cut the case down to the proper length...right? A perfect 1.75" case should be the net result. Wrong.
The case length gauge didn't "bottom out" when screwed into the cutter, it just got progressively tighter. It would seem to me that a "stop" of some kind, or a definite shoulder on the gauge would make sense..? Anyhow, I dropped the longest case on and it didn't connect with the cutter. (?) Naturally, I assumed that the gauge needs to be screwed into the cutter a little deeper, but I'd already reached the "hand tight" maximum. I grabbed some pliers and it threaded in deeper and without forcing it, I stopped when I felt resistance. Re-tried the case, cutter connected, but cut the case down to about 1.635". Thinking I had it too deep now (and that shouldn't be possible if this tool was any good) I backed-out the gauge a little but results after that were not consistent.
So...were I to try and wrap all this rambling-up with some concise questions, they might look like this;
1. Is this gauge/trimmer garbage, am I using it right?
2. The post-sizing dimensions above~would you load them as is, or mic. every one and trim any out of spec.?
3. Considering the application (=not match shooting) am I really over-thinking this, expecting superior results from inexpensive tools?
4. Should I push-back my plans on re-loading until I can get "better" trimmer?
Looking at those dimensions again, the most "out-of-spec" case is on the small side, but only off of the .0065".
If I haven't lost you by this point...feel free to chime in and set me straight! Thanks for taking a moment to respond.
My goal is to develop a great load for varmint hunting, groundhogs mostly...but for it to print well and really help me stretch the limits of how far I can take a poke at these big buggers. I took a "Hail Mary" shot at one more than 400 yards away last summer and while I don't own a range finder (will be correcting that too) it got me thinking that a shot like that should be possible. (I missed it...3 times
In my research, .223 case length should be 1.75" but I'm wondering...how critical is that what tolerances do you guys try to achieve? With the dent in the primer caps, I thought it best to size the cases (RCBS Partner press, RCBS FL .223 dies), pop-out the primer caps and THEN measure. Brass is all once-fired Hornady, mostly loaded with 55gr. V-Max. I took some sample measurements to show you how what the sizing looked like after that process;
1.751"
1.745"
1.7435"
1.7455"
1.749"
1.747"
1.7525"
1.753"
1.749"
1.747"
Naturally...being wet behind the ears...I thought GREAT, I can try my new LEE trimmer on the long ones! This is what was recommended to me;
http://www.midwayusa.com/product/476992/lee-case-trimmer-cutter-and-lock-stud
http://www.midwayusa.com/product/107333/lee-case-length-gage-and-shellholder-223-remington
The case length gauge threads into the case trimmer/cutter, the case slides over it...that little pin protrudes into the primer pocket and (presumably) bottoms-out once the trimmer has cut the case down to the proper length...right? A perfect 1.75" case should be the net result. Wrong.
The case length gauge didn't "bottom out" when screwed into the cutter, it just got progressively tighter. It would seem to me that a "stop" of some kind, or a definite shoulder on the gauge would make sense..? Anyhow, I dropped the longest case on and it didn't connect with the cutter. (?) Naturally, I assumed that the gauge needs to be screwed into the cutter a little deeper, but I'd already reached the "hand tight" maximum. I grabbed some pliers and it threaded in deeper and without forcing it, I stopped when I felt resistance. Re-tried the case, cutter connected, but cut the case down to about 1.635". Thinking I had it too deep now (and that shouldn't be possible if this tool was any good) I backed-out the gauge a little but results after that were not consistent.
So...were I to try and wrap all this rambling-up with some concise questions, they might look like this;
1. Is this gauge/trimmer garbage, am I using it right?
2. The post-sizing dimensions above~would you load them as is, or mic. every one and trim any out of spec.?
3. Considering the application (=not match shooting) am I really over-thinking this, expecting superior results from inexpensive tools?
4. Should I push-back my plans on re-loading until I can get "better" trimmer?
Looking at those dimensions again, the most "out-of-spec" case is on the small side, but only off of the .0065".
If I haven't lost you by this point...feel free to chime in and set me straight! Thanks for taking a moment to respond.
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