woods
Well-Known Member
From a previous post on another forum:
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Some questions from woods:
Would the die have any advantage if you are not having any problem chambering reloaded rounds?
Sooner or later you will have trouble getting your belted magnum handloads to chamber. It's just a matter of time. Another sypmtom you may encounter is a "fail to extract". This is caused by jamming an excessively wide handload into a tapered chamber. (works just like a milling bit with a morse taper). I've seen a lot of these handloads that required a mallet to open the bolt. The Belted Magnum Collet Resizing Die will also solve that problem.
Does the die do anything to alleviate the tendency of the belted magnums to develop case head separation and how does it do that?
No .... because 99% of case head separations are caused by excessive headspace. That's a completely different problem.
If your die sizes the whole case smaller everytime then doesn't that mean that the brass is "worked" more with each firing?
No. The Belted Magum Collet Resizing Die doesn't resize the whole case. It just resizes the pressure ring "just above the belt". It resizes to the SAAMI spec minimum dimension, and it is only required on cases that won't fit into the top of our die.
Why don't you make a collet for a regular (30-06 type case)? Doesn't the same situation at the pressure ring present itself?
There is no need for this type of extra resizing on non-belted calibers. Unlike cases like the 30-06, the belt on any belted case will limit the travel of any conventional FL resizing die.
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Here you clearly say that your die does nothing to alleviate case head separations, so I would assume that the use of your die is only to make cases that are hard to chamber, easier to chamber. So if I am reloading for 19 different guns that have belts and have never encountered the problem, would the die have any other uses that would justify their cost?
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Some questions from woods:
Would the die have any advantage if you are not having any problem chambering reloaded rounds?
Sooner or later you will have trouble getting your belted magnum handloads to chamber. It's just a matter of time. Another sypmtom you may encounter is a "fail to extract". This is caused by jamming an excessively wide handload into a tapered chamber. (works just like a milling bit with a morse taper). I've seen a lot of these handloads that required a mallet to open the bolt. The Belted Magnum Collet Resizing Die will also solve that problem.
Does the die do anything to alleviate the tendency of the belted magnums to develop case head separation and how does it do that?
No .... because 99% of case head separations are caused by excessive headspace. That's a completely different problem.
If your die sizes the whole case smaller everytime then doesn't that mean that the brass is "worked" more with each firing?
No. The Belted Magum Collet Resizing Die doesn't resize the whole case. It just resizes the pressure ring "just above the belt". It resizes to the SAAMI spec minimum dimension, and it is only required on cases that won't fit into the top of our die.
Why don't you make a collet for a regular (30-06 type case)? Doesn't the same situation at the pressure ring present itself?
There is no need for this type of extra resizing on non-belted calibers. Unlike cases like the 30-06, the belt on any belted case will limit the travel of any conventional FL resizing die.
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Here you clearly say that your die does nothing to alleviate case head separations, so I would assume that the use of your die is only to make cases that are hard to chamber, easier to chamber. So if I am reloading for 19 different guns that have belts and have never encountered the problem, would the die have any other uses that would justify their cost?