snapped off the handle on my lube sizer sizing some 500 grain 4570 bullets and I know there going to charge me to fix it again! Never again with the lyman junk!
Posts: 1404 | Location: munising MI USA | Registered: 29 March 2002
Bad luck, Lloyd. You must have gotten a bad cast or something when Lyman made the thing. I have an old Lyman lube sizer that I cannot imagine the bullets it has lubed and it still works like new one.
I see you are from MI. It makes me wonder if you are working in a very cold room where your lubricant has chilled to the consistency of concrete? This would dramatically increase the pressures required to operate the sizer. (I'm just guessing here.)
Posts: 19677 | Location: New Mexico | Registered: 23 May 2002
yup Mi but I had the lube heater going and the lube was flowing perfectly Those long bullets hang up once in a while and need a little shove to get them started out I wasnt even giving it much snuff and it snapped off. Second time its happeded. The star should be here this week and then the lymans wont be used much anymore.
quote:Originally posted by Pecos45: Bad luck, Lloyd. You must have gotten a bad cast or something when Lyman made the thing. I have an old Lyman lube sizer that I cannot imagine the bullets it has lubed and it still works like new one.
I see you are from MI. It makes me wonder if you are working in a very cold room where your lubricant has chilled to the consistency of concrete? This would dramatically increase the pressures required to operate the sizer. (I'm just guessing here.)
Posts: 1404 | Location: munising MI USA | Registered: 29 March 2002
I can't invision how you could break a handle sizing bullets. If you are applying that kind of force to run the bullet through the sizer, I can only imagine how the soft lead bullet is being distorted as well. Bullet quality has to suffer greatly, especially if you are looking for match grade long range bullets. How much are you sizing your bullets down?
5090
Posts: 5 | Location: N.E. | Registered: 07 September 2002
Call them before judging them,I`ve broken a few things in my past,and both Lyman & RCBS have always replaced them.hell even a powder measure that cracked from being rusted solid from years of neglect,when rust let loose the frame broke,it was over 20 years old and one call they sent a new housing and a pistol size drum for free,never had to return the old parts either.try that with some Lee crap and see what they tell you.
if youve ever sized really long bullets in a lyman with a gas check youll find that they hang up on the return stroke and sometimes you really have to give it a shove to get them back up. These were 500 grain .4570 gas check bullets cast out of lynotype and I have a buddy who has probably casted more bullets then I have seen and he has cracked two of them too so beleive me it will happen If anyone doubts my bullet casting ability Im sure theres a few here that have used my bullets that will back me up. My sizers may get used a little more then average as I usually spend at least 10 hours a week casting. I know one thing though I finally got the star up and running last night and those lymans will be collecting dust for the most part now. I can size in half the time with less efford with that thing. I sized down a .458 gas check bullet to .452 just to try it and didnt even have the thing bolted to the bench and it took care of it easily!
Posts: 1404 | Location: munising MI USA | Registered: 29 March 2002