A friend recently loaded 50 rounds of 300 Savage with new PPU brass. Most of them would not chamber and he had to take them apart. Maybe he could have gotten away with neck sizing only but not wanting to take any more chances, did a full resize.
Most all of the new brass that I buy is in bulk bags - so I expect a number of them to have dinged up/ pressed in case mouths, etc. As a result, I set up my FL die to "partially size" - I do not use lube, and is like 1/8" (6 mm) or so between bottom of die and the shell holder in the press - lets me run the expander ball in and out to make them "round" - may not be an issue if you load boat tail bullets.
Don’t FL size new brass. What a monumental waste of time. The only thing you can possibly accomplish is creating a headspace problem. Your brass is already smaller dimensionally than your dies. Especially WW and Hornady brass.
I usually size the neck only, not the entire case.
Don’t FL size new brass. What a monumental waste of time. The only thing you can possibly accomplish is creating a headspace problem. Your brass is already smaller dimensionally than your dies. Especially WW and Hornady brass.
Don’t FL size new brass. What a monumental waste of time. The only thing you can possibly accomplish is creating a headspace problem. Your brass is already smaller dimensionally than your dies. Especially WW and Hornady brass.
Took Potashminers advice today, setup my die with 1/“ gap and ran all 100 rounds thru and did notice a number not totally round at the neck so this resize cured that. Also checked the length and all were exactly the same. Busy with life tomorrow but Friday I plan to run a few thru my rifle and will then get to primers and developing some loads.
If it’s already smaller than the die then FL sizing won’t make it any smaller than it already is. And it won’t cause headspace issues because the die won’t touch the shoulder.
It will uniform the necks and the expander will iron out any dings.
FL or Neck - either way, new brass should be run through a die. If he only has a FL die, then the OP should still use it. In my humble opinion anyway.
I now have 100 Winchester and 100 Hornady brass in .243. Should I resize so I can get shoulder setback close to my old brass or should I load and fire form? Don’t really want to fireform 100 brass and then try find the accuracy sweet spots and then go thru another 100 rds. And powder is expensive. And which brand should I use for this. Read good and bad on both brands.
My tired brass is Federal and has been great, over 9 reloads at this point.
Neck sizing dies were made for Benchrest competitor shooting 6PPC and other Benchrest cartridge in the 70’s - 80’s. This was abandoned for full length sizing thereafter.
Even if you neck size - just a matter of a few shot - it will be need to full size anyway. Brass bulge at the .200 datum area and no choice to full length size it.
Learn to adjust your sizing die for .002 shoulder bump on most gun - semi- .004-.006 and you gun will work better without reloader induced problems.
I now have 100 Winchester and 100 Hornady brass in .243. Should I resize so I can get shoulder setback close to my old brass or should I load and fire form? Don’t really want to fireform 100 brass and then try find the accuracy sweet spots and then go thru another 100 rds.
You accomplish nothing with a 1 inches gap. You want to make the base - the brass body all in specs. I don’t understand that folly to be afraid to full length size brass..sizing die are made for sizing brass not looking at it. Not a single manufacturers - reloading book authors - competition shooters will ever state to leave a 1 inches gap under a sizing die…crazy.
New brass- Just load and fire them as per usual
Once fired brass- F/L resize them being diligent not to bump the shoulder too much. Use a comparator tool and move the shoulder back 1-2 thou.
Correction….should have read as 1/8” gap. Sorry this got a few of you off track, my bad. Upon inspection of each case I noticed quite a few of the necks weren’t round so took Potashminers advice and put them thru the die. Measured and all were correct length. Next steps are to prime, load and shot which will fireform the cases. From there after 2nd shoot I will anneal and start again. I setback at .002 which my rifle gives me the best accuracy, that was with the well used Federal cases.
Neck sizing dies were made for Benchrest competitor shooting 6PPC and other Benchrest cartridge in the 70’s - 80’s. This was abandoned for full length sizing thereafter.
Even if you neck size - just a matter of a few shot - it will be need to full size anyway. Brass bulge at the .200 datum area and no choice to full length size it.
Learn to adjust your sizing die for .002 shoulder bump on most gun - semi- .004-.006 and you gun will work better without reloader induced problems.