It's all brass I've used. Rem and winchester, I checked , it's admixture of both. 25 rnds of good ammo are win and rem brass, 5 rnds of bad ammo are win.
I'll do some resizing tomorrow , separating the cases, by name and lenght. The winchester cases , which are once fired, are rough looking. As a matter of fact they were rough looking when I bought the cartridges new. Win 45g ,50 rnd economy pks,they were cheap.
And there is your problem. Precision reloading is all about consistency, and mixing your brass ensures that you won't have that consistency. The wall thickness of the case neck varies from brand to brand, and even among different batches of the same brand. If the case wall thickness is greater, the ID of the sized case neck will be less, and there will be more of an interference fit between the bullet and the case neck. If the case necks are thinner, then there will be less interference between the bullet and the case neck, and the neck tension may be inadequate, resulting in the bullet being loose in the case.
Please remove , mods.
LOL. You guys think crimping for an Auto is a waist of time, yet you are seriously suggesting this guy separate his brass by lot number? Have you read the title to the thread?
I swear, F-Classers are like Torontonians - they think the sun rises and sets out their a$$.
Hey every one who replyed, I closed this thread by mistake, as I had 3 threads going at once. There's good advice here for me and others , so I wanted to keep this one open. Regards to the crimp or not, I'm new , so I'll base my opinion on what you guys have said and what I've read from my research. I think you shouldn't have to crimp, and my issue is either the brass or an adjustment with my die. I'm going to sort my brass and resize , to all the same lenght. Also there's a test , where you load 3or4 dummy rounds , chamber a couple , then measure the third rnd, to see if there's any setback.
I just resized 30 pcs of brass,10 rem,10 win, 10 hornady. Hornady OD -246. Rem OD 243-246 win OD 243. I'm going to trim all 30 to same lenght . I'll then recheck OD with and without a projectile.The case length isn't the issue, and chambering a round really doesn't prove much. You would be wise to do as my previous post suggested, and measure the OD of the necks of some sized cases, and then compare them to the OD of the necks of the same cases with bullets seated. That will tell you if you have enough neck tension. You are going to need a difference of at least .002".
I just resized 30 pcs of brass,10 rem,10 win, 10 hornady. Hornady OD -246. Rem OD 243-246 win OD 243. I'm going to trim all 30 to same lenght . I'll then recheck OD with and without a projectile.
After resizing and trimming to same lenght:Rem OD 244-245 Win OD 244-245. Hornady OD 246-247.. All. ID is 218-219. I'll seat some projectiles, in awhile, and remeasure.
The case length isn't the issue, and chambering a round really doesn't prove much. You would be wise to do as my previous post suggested, and measure the OD of the necks of some sized cases, and then compare them to the OD of the necks of the same cases with bullets seated. That will tell you if you have enough neck tension. You are going to need a difference of at least .002".



























