- Location
- Vancouver Island
Hi - an interesting situation here. I'm starting the process of load development for a new rifle, in .223, and was hoping that someone else out there might have been there first.
So, I started by using my Hornady OAL gauge to measure the length that I should be able to seat the bullet (50gn VMax) to in the chamber. This worked out to be just a hair over the length of the modified case itself, at 1.759" (at ogive) after measuring it several times, using a wooden dowel down the muzzle to wiggle the bullet back and forth to find exactly when it hits the lands. (And yes, I do know the max case length is 1.760" - I can see -just- a sliver of daylight between the case mouth and the bullet comparator when measuring the oal, so I can say that the comparator is reading off the ogive, and not resting on the case itself).
So, using the 1.759" number, I'm now trying to seat a bullet into a case, and I'm finding that I can't get the Lee seating die to seat this bullet to that length - I run out of adjustment at about 1.775, which means that I'd be jamming the bullet into the lands by about 0.016", which I don't really think I would want to be doing with my starting loads.
My first question, I guess, is: is this a known issue with the Lee seating die with some bullets? I've not encountered this before with it, but I've never tried to seat a bullet this close to case length, either.
Second question: would this happen with other seating dies as well, seating this close to max case length? I'm kinda hoping not, so that this issue would be a justification for buying a Redding or Forster seater...
Note 1: I tried chambering the case that was loaded to 1.775 in the rifle, and it chambered and came back out without the bullet being pressed further down into the case, which makes it sound like the measurement might be wonky, messing me up from the start?
Note 2: I also repeated the whole process with 60gn VMaxes, and things worked better/more normally there (i.e. the measured depth was longer than 1.760, and the seating die worked as expected for the 60gn bullet), which makes it sound like an issue with the particular bullet.
Thanks!
So, I started by using my Hornady OAL gauge to measure the length that I should be able to seat the bullet (50gn VMax) to in the chamber. This worked out to be just a hair over the length of the modified case itself, at 1.759" (at ogive) after measuring it several times, using a wooden dowel down the muzzle to wiggle the bullet back and forth to find exactly when it hits the lands. (And yes, I do know the max case length is 1.760" - I can see -just- a sliver of daylight between the case mouth and the bullet comparator when measuring the oal, so I can say that the comparator is reading off the ogive, and not resting on the case itself).
So, using the 1.759" number, I'm now trying to seat a bullet into a case, and I'm finding that I can't get the Lee seating die to seat this bullet to that length - I run out of adjustment at about 1.775, which means that I'd be jamming the bullet into the lands by about 0.016", which I don't really think I would want to be doing with my starting loads.
My first question, I guess, is: is this a known issue with the Lee seating die with some bullets? I've not encountered this before with it, but I've never tried to seat a bullet this close to case length, either.
Second question: would this happen with other seating dies as well, seating this close to max case length? I'm kinda hoping not, so that this issue would be a justification for buying a Redding or Forster seater...
Note 1: I tried chambering the case that was loaded to 1.775 in the rifle, and it chambered and came back out without the bullet being pressed further down into the case, which makes it sound like the measurement might be wonky, messing me up from the start?
Note 2: I also repeated the whole process with 60gn VMaxes, and things worked better/more normally there (i.e. the measured depth was longer than 1.760, and the seating die worked as expected for the 60gn bullet), which makes it sound like an issue with the particular bullet.
Thanks!




























DO NOT SEAT BULLET INTO A CARTRIDGE THAT HAS A PRIMER OR POWDER IN IT 






















