lyle2231
Well-Known Member
Eliminate all of the aggravation, order a new die. Put the old one on the shelf. Problem solved. Just my 2c
Would machine shop be a capable alternative? Maybe send the die to the brass manufacturer asking for help? Just thinking out loud….Remove the die internals, use a bottoming tap smaller than case od to tap inside of case, thread a bolt into the tapped case and then use a brass drift to drive the case out. Most of the time the case will come out during the tapping. Not at bench to get the size of the tap needed,
Ditto, I'm sure Redding will take care of it, and Peterson will more than likely make it worth your while. I've found good companies are good at customer service, and visa versaThere's nothing to pull. I'll send it back to Redding & call Peterson.
+1 to find root cause to be sure it's not your chamber.It is very, very easy to ruin dies with taps.
I would try running a very tight pistol brush up into the case in the die first. I have used this method in getting cases out of a chamber, but this is the first I have ever heard of it happening with a NECK sizer??? I wonder if the case was ready to split as it was extracted from the chamber and you did not see the very apparent line around the case. If this was the case, then did you have excessive headspace created by either you on the full-length sizing or the gunsmith? You may want to examine the remainder of the cases you fired on that day.
Thought should be given to why this happened in the first place to avoid repeating the issue.
Have you ever tried this product?IRWIN traight flute extractor. I have used it on broken bolts. I bet it would work. Got mine from ACE
After my last experience with broken bolts/bleeder studs, I use that or similar product the night before, let it soak over night. But for the case, I bet that IRWIN set would work just fine.Have you ever tried this product?
It is very, very easy to ruin dies with taps.
I would try running a very tight pistol brush up into the case in the die first. I have used this method in getting cases out of a chamber, but this is the first I have ever heard of it happening with a NECK sizer??? I wonder if the case was ready to split as it was extracted from the chamber and you did not see the very apparent line around the case. If this was the case, then did you have excessive headspace created by either you on the full-length sizing or the gunsmith? You may want to examine the remainder of the cases you fired on that day.
Thought should be given to why this happened in the first place to avoid repeating the issue.