I push my expander ball into the case neck then run it thru a neck bushing twice on new brass. Once fired brass I'll use a cpl neck bushings to get the neck OD down to .3115 then do the process I use for new brass. Works for me so far.
No confusion here , but I guess the big question would be how much less run out would you get all things be equal . That wouldn't necessarily be my question but anyone trying too improve their reloading techniques. I guess there is no way too know unless trying both ways.NO! The guy provided options, what you do with them is entirely up to the end-user. The guy even caveat to stick with what works for you. I am not sure where the confusion is.
I have seen a Lee collet die remove .002 run out in a case neck. I am not saying that it will always work, but I had to give it a try myself. I still experiment with new stuff when I get the chance. I am sure that I will die of old age before I try it all.I believe that the idea behind mandrel use is to not introduce runout. Runout could be caused by many things and the use of a mandrel is not to eliminate runout that's already present.
Or, that's at least my take on it.
Now that sounds like the way too do it . I may have too try thatAnnealing after every firing, I use a bushing to size the neck down the least amount I need to in order get the ID expanded by the pin gauge of size necessary for my desired neck interference, with the least amount of work to my brass.
That's why he offered options for end-users to try and see what works for them.No confusion here , but I guess the big question would be how much less run out would you get all things be equal . That wouldn't necessarily be my question but anyone trying too improve their reloading techniques. I guess there is no way to know unless trying both ways.
My reference was to the use of a mandrel after the neck was minimally sized, not to the use of a Lee die.I have seen a Lee collet die remove .002 run out in a case neck. I am not saying that it will always work, but I had to give it a try myself. I still experiment with new stuff when I get the chance. I am sure that I will die of old age before I try it all.
this is pretty new and I might be a little slow.
I understand the theory of turning necks, neck sizing without full length suze and full length plus using a neck bushing to resize a neck to customize neck tension on a bullet.
However, I hear talk about using a mandrel that pushes into the neck. I don't understand why one would want to do that if you can resize the neck from the outside.
Can somebody walk me through this? I've reloaded my own ammo for 25 years, but this seems odd to me.
I, like many, run chambers with "no turn" necks. I check neck thickness on new brass and will do a skim turn if it varies as I check it. I wait until it has been one-fired to do so.this is pretty new and I might be a little slow.
I understand the theory of turning necks, neck sizing without full length suze and full length plus using a neck bushing to resize a neck to customize neck tension on a bullet.
However, I hear talk about using a mandrel that pushes into the neck. I don't understand why one would want to do that if you can resize the neck from the outside.
Can somebody walk me through this? I've reloaded my own ammo for 25 years, but this seems odd to me.
I misunderstood. Reread it. Got it.My reference was to the use of a mandrel after the neck was minimally sized, not to the use of a Lee die.
However, your point is well taken.
if I neck size with a bushing wouldn't it work the neck brass less?Shawn
When we pull a expander Ball back through the neck to set the final neck neck diameter we stretch the neck and introduce more runout.
We have learned that a Mandrel pushed into the neck does not stretch the neck and introduces much less runout.
The reason we use a Mandrel to expand the neck instead of relying on the neck bushing is because brass resists the last direction we move it in. Plus the Mandrel pushes the imperfections to the outside of the neck causing more consistent neck tension.
I think you added a step. I would not put it in a mandrel die/collet die if I had used a bushing die.if I neck size with a bushing wouldn't it work the neck brass less?
So, let me see if I understand you all...
For best accuracy..less run out. You run a bushing over the neck while full length resizing the case body. Then- use a mandrel to push inside the case neck leaving the inside diameter the preferred dimension for neck tension..say around .002 less than bullet diameter.
Reasons being the expander ball on most dies increases runout- at least more than the mandrel does. Is this right?