slikmrc
Well-Known Member
Your Hornady die should have a neck expander on the decap rod. You can run the cases over the expander to uniform them.Would you run the Lee collet neck die as I don't have a mandrel die
Your Hornady die should have a neck expander on the decap rod. You can run the cases over the expander to uniform them.Would you run the Lee collet neck die as I don't have a mandrel die
It's always a good idea to ensure that the new brass you buy is the same wall thickness as your existing brass, otherwise the neck tension won't be the same.I use a expander mandril on the new brass and then use your chosen neck bush to resize the new brass to the size you want.So I have a batch of new adg 6.5prc brass. They recommend sizing it and even though their packaging is good the necks have a few dings in them.
So I have a set of hornaday match grade dies and a Lee collet die. What would you guys recommend?
Thanks for any help
Same. With new brass I mandrel, chamfer, debur, load and shoot. I don't even start load dev until after the first firing.New brass with ADG, Lapua and Peterson. I size the necks and chamfer and deburr the necks
I have done this. It works. You are stuck with the mandrel size used in the Lee collet die, but it is usually close to optimum. The mandrel can be modified but that's another question thread.Would you run the Lee collet neck die as I don't have a mandrel die
That's not true, Starline brass is annealed from the factory. See attachment straight from their Facebook page.I looked on their website's FAQ page. I didn't see anything about annealing new brass. Can you share the link with that information?
Yep, that's what I thought.That's not true, Starline brass is annealed from the factory. See attachment straight from their Facebook page.