- Location
- Vancouver Island
Hi all - a question for the experienced folks here.
The problem: I'm suddenly getting very light, parallel scratch marks on my .223 brass from the Lee full-length sizer die.
I've taken the die apart, and there are several very light raised lines in there which I'm thinking are causing the problem - they're about the same distance apart as the scratches on the brass. If I rub a q-tip around in circles on the inside of the die, I can -just barely- feel the ridges - they're not big/sharp enough to catch fibers from the q-tip, tho.
(Not sure how the ridges would have been formed, unless they're the result of some grit getting in there and gauging out a "trough" during case insertion, with the new ridges being the resulting material moved sideways from the trough - just a guess?)
Anyway, I've got no background in metal polishing, but I'm thinking that some sort of polishing process would be recommended in order to correct this - I don't want to replace the die if it's fixable with a bit of effort (plus it's produced more consistent ammo for me than the Redding version has - I do prefer the Redding seater die over the Lee, tho).
So, what materials/gear/process do I need to buy/follow to best do this? I'm thinking that 50 grit sandpaper isn't going to be the solution here...
Thanks in advance!
The problem: I'm suddenly getting very light, parallel scratch marks on my .223 brass from the Lee full-length sizer die.
I've taken the die apart, and there are several very light raised lines in there which I'm thinking are causing the problem - they're about the same distance apart as the scratches on the brass. If I rub a q-tip around in circles on the inside of the die, I can -just barely- feel the ridges - they're not big/sharp enough to catch fibers from the q-tip, tho.
(Not sure how the ridges would have been formed, unless they're the result of some grit getting in there and gauging out a "trough" during case insertion, with the new ridges being the resulting material moved sideways from the trough - just a guess?)
Anyway, I've got no background in metal polishing, but I'm thinking that some sort of polishing process would be recommended in order to correct this - I don't want to replace the die if it's fixable with a bit of effort (plus it's produced more consistent ammo for me than the Redding version has - I do prefer the Redding seater die over the Lee, tho).
So, what materials/gear/process do I need to buy/follow to best do this? I'm thinking that 50 grit sandpaper isn't going to be the solution here...
Thanks in advance!


















































