Forster CoAx is popular.... have you measured the runout of your ammo while using your LEE?
Dies matter a whole lot more then the press in making precision ammo. Now if the press ram is moving in some wonky pattern, then change for sure. But if moving true and each step produces the results we need, a fancy press isn't going to change or improve anything.
Now if you are working with very large cases like Chey Tac and BMG, then you are asking about mechanical leverage.
If you are truly interested in making better ammo, spend the money on quality milligram scales and better brass prep/maintenance tools.
Gucchi press is not likely to change your results.
Jerry
Talon Advanced
Talon Advanced
Thats a serious looking press.
I have a Redding Big Boss.
I haven’t checked runout. The issue I am having is obtaining consistent headspace. The Lee press is a Wobbly loose cheapie. The flex and wobble make it impossible to produce cartridges with the same headspace. They vary by a few thousandths.
I can’t turn lead into gold. A more solid press would produce more repeatable results.
Check the following:
Bullet itself... what brand? What is the base to ogive varying of the bullet itself?
neck tension? How tight is the neck tension? If over 2 thou, not much is going to help make it consistent
What type of seating die?
Annealing? How much have you fired the cases and are you annealing? Inconsistent neck tension is a major cause of inconsistent seating depth.
Outside neck turning? Are you doing this step? If you have fired your cases more then 2 times and not turned your necks, likely that is source of problems. There is only 1 neck sizer that is tolerant of this BUT it will eventually be a problem in seating inconsistencies.
Measurement accuracy? can you measure the same case to the same thou 10 times in a row? Many comparators and measure styles create their own error. I give my calipers a 1 thou error cause that is what is part of the device.
If you are concerned about your press, by all means change it.... but you might want to locate where the other possible places for error may occur. Might surprise you where the problem actually lies.
Jerry
Not sure I understand how those factors cause differences in headspace. I am focusing on my inability to produce consistent headspace dimensions as I know it’s an issue.
Rock chicken and partner press.
Change your case lube... that will likely help
Turn your sizing die full down on the shellholder... or you may need to take a couple of thou off the bottom of the die.
Run the case into the sizing die, turn 90deg and bump again.
Jerry
I have tried Lee lube, RCBS 2, and Lanolin IPA. The lanolin IPA in a spray bottle works the best IMO.
Either way I am using Hornady Custom Grade dies. They seem okay but I don’t have experience with any other brands either. The Hornady dies are setup so Cam-Over is not required to size the casing. I have been using Cam Over and forcing the die and shell holder to touch. This produces a minimum spec headspace. This method was acceptable for my Savage where I had headspace set just above minimum. Unfortunately this method is unacceptable for other rifles that don’t have the headspace set to minimum.
Not sure I understand how those factors cause differences in headspace. I am focusing on my inability to produce consistent headspace dimensions as I know it’s an issue.




























