If you are shooting with a tubular mag I would suggest you crimp.
And use flat nose, semi flat nose, or round nose not pointed bullets.
If you are shooting with a tubular mag I would suggest you crimp.
And use flat nose, semi flat nose, or round nose not pointed bullets.
I prefer to use a separate crimp die with my tube feeds.
Easier to use and you don't need to be so precise on case length.
Less chance of bulging the brass under the neck area.
My tip for 30-30 since i am pretty sure that crimping has been covered is>>>>>
Dont try to make it something it is not. The case has a limited capacity, no matter how much powder you stuff or compressed the load, it is still a 30-30. Find a accurate load for your rifle, be that near max or several grains less. Many calibers benefit from increased performance and cost savings through loading, 30-30 really does not or very limited. Cheap ammo at Walmart,...... a lot of time invested, components to buy, and it still is a 30-30. YMMV.
You sure your seating die doesn't contain a crimp feature?
More than a few do.
One thing to consider with the 30-30 for you folks looking to save money, don't buy jacketed bullets. You can fire the gas checked lead RN ones instead, and they cost about half as much if you buy them, and significantly less if you make them (I don't).
The 30-30 isn't a particularly fast firing round, so you don't even really need those copper jackets. I believe someone above said they want cheap blasting rounds for their kids, you can make SUPER cheap ammo if you use small amounts of pistol powder with lead bullets. There's very little recoil as well. If I had kids I'd be using this setup.
Which pdf manual?
Does no one look? Perhaps I am on ignore.Easy find on google. Ill post the link later if i can find it again.



























