To Taper crimp or not to taper crimp?

Czarface

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Guys I haven't even reloaded a single bullet yet but purchased hornady dies that seat and taper crimp! I purchased 40 and 9 and they both do the same thing... I need your advice please cause I'm reading mixed reviews and couldn't find a thread here! What's the advantages and disadvantages! Thanks you all for any advice I'm really looking forward to the reloading process! Thanks Jim.
 
Hi there and welcome into the world of reloading.

In my experience, the decision to crimp or not has always been based on a few criterias :

- Am I reloading with a progressive machine that has a case mouth expander on the powder station - If so, crimpring would be required to remove the bell from the case mouth after seating the bullet.

- If I am loading by hand, and there is no case mouth flaring, is the caliber a heavy recoiling one where the bullet could be moving in or out the casing with the recoil, if it wasn't crimped?

- Still if I am loading by hand, will the cartridge hit a very steep feed ramp (like a Glock) or will it be almost aligned with the barrel when in the magazine (Beretta 92)

- Am I using a slow burning powder that would burn better / cleaner if the pressure builds up more before the bullet leaves the casing?


I am personally crimping all my handgun ammo (either taper crimp on pistol cartridges, or roll crimp on revolver cartridges)

For rifle ammo, I crimp most of it (especially ammunition that will be used in a semi-automatic rifle), leaving only my bolt-action precision rounds uncrimped.

Hope it helped.
 
If you're loading single stage, u can seat first(without crimp), then use the same die to crimp only(taper crimp adjustment is a delicate adjustment). For speed and slightly less accuracy? u can do both in one step.
 
Hi there and welcome into the world of reloading.

In my experience, the decision to crimp or not has always been based on a few criterias :

- Am I reloading with a progressive machine that has a case mouth expander on the powder station - If so, crimpring would be required to remove the bell from the case mouth after seating the bullet.

- If I am loading by hand, and there is no case mouth flaring, is the caliber a heavy recoiling one where the bullet could be moving in or out the casing with the recoil, if it wasn't crimped?

- Still if I am loading by hand, will the cartridge hit a very steep feed ramp (like a Glock) or will it be almost aligned with the barrel when in the magazine (Beretta 92)

- Am I using a slow burning powder that would burn better / cleaner if the pressure builds up more before the bullet leaves the casing?


I am personally crimping all my handgun ammo (either taper crimp on pistol cartridges, or roll crimp on revolver cartridges)

For rifle ammo, I crimp most of it (especially ammunition that will be used in a semi-automatic rifle), leaving only my bolt-action precision rounds uncrimped.

Hope it helped.
Wow! A lot to take in but very helpful... I have a LNL progressive I'm starting on, but not sure if the powder die flares out the mouth of the case?? I also own a glock in 9mm and beretta in 40 so...
 
Wow! A lot to take in but very helpful... I have a LNL progressive I'm starting on, but not sure if the powder die flares out the mouth of the case?? I also own a glock in 9mm and beretta in 40 so...

On the HDY AP the PTX expander is used to flare or you can buy a "Universal Powder Through Expander" from powderfunnels. com so you don't need a PTX for each caliber.
 
For pistol ammo, I always taper crimp with one full turn of my LEE factory crimp die. I also check every round with a Dillon case lenght gauge but you can just use your barrel if you wish.

For my other firearms, I use a LEE factory crimp die for my AR ammo and I roll crimp for my revolver rounds.

And don't worry, I was also confused about the crimping process when I started reloading only a year ago. Just read-up, ask question like you're doing now and enjoy. Reloading is so much fun......and addictive! :)
 
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