MIRAMICHIER
CGN frequent flyer
- Location
- Miramichi,Nb
Little Crow case trimmer handiest of them all just need a cordless drill.
Little Crow case trimmer handiest of them all just need a cordless drill.
I am aware of the Hornady shell holders , they have a .300 hole, have to drill out old RCBS and others, to use them on a Hornady lathe trimmer as well, same setup. I think the newer RCBS have the .300 hole now. That is a good vid on it, watched it before I'd ordered it.
Lee trimmer and a cordless drill works well.
Lee trimmer and a drill press works great.
I may want to try enlarging my non-Hornady sheel holders with a 7.6mm (.2992") drill. So far only found some in High speed steel, not harder.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Gyros-7...de-Metric-Drill-Bit-6-Pack-45-42094/204614360
I may want to try enlarging my non-Hornady sheel holders with a 7.6mm (.2992") drill. So far only found some in High speed steel, not harder.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Gyros-7...de-Metric-Drill-Bit-6-Pack-45-42094/204614360
I've been using the lee trim dies and my cordless drill... that all works well, quick, and accurate. It's the chamfering and deburring that gets old quick. I think it's time I buy a powered machine for doing this in bulk... or is the deluxe trimmer head that does it at the same time effective & accurate?
I disassembled and pulled the outer blades off of mine. They kept on getting bound up by chaff from the trimming process and f*****g up the brass. Take it apart, clean it out and 20 or 30 cases later and they would be sticking again. If left without rigorous cleaning, they would keep chamfering until so well over chamfered as to ruin the brass. Bottom line is to just use the regular Lee trimming head. I use a Lyman Case Prep Xpress post trimming to do the inner and outer chamfer, primer pocket final clean, and then a couple of strokes on the appropriate nylon brush to clean out any chaff. Since I normally only trim once this isn't too onerous a task, although it gets a bit old after 100 or so.
Edit ->> Forgot to add that the trimmer blades do wear out at some point. Tool is so inexpensive that I just buy a couple every so often and replace it. I figure that for the price of one of those fancy carbide cutter units, I can buy more than enough standard Lee cutter assemblies to do about 10 times the amount that one carbide cutter will do in its lifetime.
That's my experience anyway.




























