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| I started reloading with one of those old Herter's presses about 40 years ago. I think it cost less than $30 new. About $1 a pound. They are huge.
I just got a Lyman 45 sizer going last week too. Nice old tool. Holds the pressure much better than my Lyman 450. |
| Posts: 17 | Location: SE Ohio | Registered: 23 October 2003 |
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| I "graduated" from an Ideal 310 tong tool in .30-'06 to a Herters turret model in 1959 or 1960; a neighbor got one of their "double barrel" presses at the same time. After a few years, I sold the Herters turret (too bulky, and the turret was either too tight, or too loose and wobbled a bit) and got the R. F. Wells single-station "clone" of the basic Herters (did Wells make these for Herters, or vice-versa? They were identical except for the cast-in company name), and used it until I got my RCBS A-2. Good tools and well worth their very low cost! I got my wife the Herters "Bull Moose Cookbook" - all three volumes - and we still get a laugh (and an occasional good recipe) out of them. floodgate |
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| Tom...I miskeyed and there is only one primer arm. I don't know if it is small or large, but it does come with a spring and cross bolt and wing nut. I think the latter is a replacment part. If you want it how about a buck? That will make me even on the press. If you want it send priority mail throw in another $3.50. If not $2.00 for regular mail (I will have to buy a padded envelope). I am away from my home computor and it will be Monday before I can get back with you by email. Anyway..that is the deal...Want it? |
| Posts: 263 | Location: Corpus Christi, Texas | Registered: 23 December 2002 |
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| (not)Ricochet - Try boiling hot water to melt the lube out. It also works great on cosmoline. |
| Posts: 621 | Location: Virginia mountains | Registered: 25 December 2002 |
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| The Lyman 45 I redid was full of hardened lube too. I warmed it up with a heat gun and poured the lube out. I didn't want to get it hot so I did it gently about 3 times. Doesn't take a lot of heat. Only took about 10 minutes to clean it out. |
| Posts: 17 | Location: SE Ohio | Registered: 23 October 2003 |
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| Thanks for the tips!
Wonder what's in that lube that turns so gluey? I got some of it on my hands, and it feels like tar! |
| Posts: 424 | Location: Bristol, Tennessee, USA | Registered: 28 September 2003 |
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| Am I missing something in this old Ideal #45 sizer/lubricator? I've got everything freed up and working, and ready to load it up with lube. I've tried turning the operating screw for the lube pump both ways till I'm blue in the face, and don't get any grease cup popping up out of the reservoir. When I take the cap off and look down, I can see a disk at the bottom that rotates with the screw. I don't see anything to prevent the cup or disk from rotating with the screw inside the barrel, which I'd think would be necessary to screw it in or out. Am I looking at the pump piston, that's just turning with the screw and not moving up or down? [ 10-27-2003, 00:56: Message edited by: NotRicochet ] |
| Posts: 424 | Location: Bristol, Tennessee, USA | Registered: 28 September 2003 |
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| Damn, I miss Herter's!
I'm still running a Herter's lubrisizer and have one volume of the cookbook.
My first press was from Herter's and was late enough so it took standard shell holders. Wish I had it back.
The Herter's catalog was the best bathroom reading that ever was. George Herter was absolutely shameless in his advertising claims. To hear him tell it, his fruit cake recipe (real good, btw} came from Diamond Lil and some other recipe came from Geronimo. My all time favorite was his fly dope that doubled as a bore solvent, mosquito repellent, liniment, and that you could drink in a pinch. Think that one got him in trouble with the FDA.
We'll never see his like again. He was a sort of early Richard Lee. His stuff was as good as it need to be, but not a whole lot better. |
| Posts: 1570 | Location: Base of the Blue Ridge | Registered: 04 November 2002 |
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| Tom, C.A., thanks! I think what I'm seeing is the top side of that assembly, but it's turning with the threaded shaft. I'm going to soak it well with Kroil overnight and then try holding it still with something pushed down from above. It's probably that dried up Lyman lube holding it locked to the shaft. The cap on top was semipermanently attached to the shaft in a half-open position, again by the lube. If the piston's glued on as tightly as the cap, that'd be enough to explain the problem. |
| Posts: 424 | Location: Bristol, Tennessee, USA | Registered: 28 September 2003 |
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| NotR: Use a screwdriver long enough to fit down into the hopper and fit into the slot in the brass expansion ring; lever it against the screw to keep it from turning as you rotate the screw with the ratchet. Go easy, and with some Kroil on the threads the piston should break free and start to come up. This happens every now and then with these lube-sizers; it shouldn't be a problem after you clean everything up and reload with fresh lube. You MAY want to spring the ring a bit further open for a tighter fit in the reservoir. floodgate |
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| quote: Originally posted by NotRicochet: Tom, C.A., thanks! I think what I'm seeing is the top side of that assembly, but it's turning with the threaded shaft. I'm going to soak it well with Kroil overnight and then try holding it still with something pushed down from above. It's probably that dried up Lyman lube holding it locked to the shaft. The cap on top was semipermanently attached to the shaft in a half-open position, again by the lube. If the piston's glued on as tightly as the cap, that'd be enough to explain the problem.
Why Lyman threads the rod and collar to turn the same direction always seemed strange to me. It is not uncommon for collar to get frozen and then the rod starts to screw out. I got tired of that, and removed the rod with the collar, cleaned everything, reinstalled the rod with lock-tite and have no problems since. The lock-tite on the bottom of the rod, allows a stubborn collar to come out. |
| Posts: 263 | Location: Corpus Christi, Texas | Registered: 23 December 2002 |
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| Another #45 works again! I couldn't find any sort of tool that could grip the slick top of the pump piston. What finally worked was this: I wadded up a paper towel and jammed it with the aid of a screwdriver down between the screw and the cylinder. When I turned the screw clockwise (the direction to raise the piston), the threads carried the towel down and tightened it against the piston top. As I kept screwing it, holding a screwdriver down into the towel, the paper jammed against the piston and the cylinder wall preventing the piston from rotating. The screw would turn out of the bottom of the pump body, and periodically I'd knock it back in flush, raising the piston as it raised the screw back up so I could keep turning it with the wrench. I cleaned the old Lyman lube out and sprung the brass ring out a bit so it'd give a better grip on the sides. Thanks for the helpful suggestions and picture! |
| Posts: 424 | Location: Bristol, Tennessee, USA | Registered: 28 September 2003 |
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| Another good fix for an old 45 sizer is lead shot in the split ring to hold it apart, also keeps the lube from leaking past. I got tired of lube leaking past the piston on mine before I heard of that tip years ago and wrote Lyman to suggest they make a solid piston with an O ring. Imagine my embarrassment when they sent me one with 2 O rings they started useing on the 450's yrs before. It worked so good I ordered 2 extra for one old Ideal and an older gray 450 that still had the split ring.
Pb head |
| Posts: 31 | Location: western Pa | Registered: 14 February 2003 |
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