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Hi why should one reseize a new case? i have loaded plent of rounds in new unfired cases and never resiezed them why it would be needed? regards Yazid E Sahrawi Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy; its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery. | ||
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Needed or not I do it.....there is at least the necessity to round up the necks as they're usually badly dented. /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// "Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." Winston Churchill | |||
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definitely to iron out the necks and also to insure case consistency. PLEASE EXCUSE CAPS, HANDICAPPED TYPIST. "THE" THREAD KILLER IT'S OK......I'VE STARTED UP MY MEDS AGAIN. THEY SHOULD TAKE EFFECT IN ABOUT A WEEK. (STACI-2006) HAPPY TRAILS HANDLOADS ARE LIKE UNDERWEAR....BE CAREFUL WHO YOU SWAP WITH. BILL | |||
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I always run new cases through the re-sizing die. I just bought new Winchester brass in the following calibers: 7mmRemMag, 30/06, 300WSM, and 375H&H. There were quite a few cases that had dents in the necks and I actually had to throw away 2 of the 375H&H cases. | |||
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Yes, to iron out the necks. | |||
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Seems like everyone has the same idea, it helps even up the neck area. Steve E....... NRA Patron Life Member GOA Life Member North American Hunting Club Life Member USAF Veteran | |||
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i do not flrs new brass for 243win , IF they will chamber in the rifle. If the case mouth is bent , i bump mouth with the expander button just a tiny amount so i can start bullet on seating | |||
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My technique is similar to yours, 243WinXB. But I run the expander ball completely through and adjust the sizing die to size most of the neck without bumping back the shoulder. Whether this is necessary or not...... I don't know. But it makes me feel better because I think it MAY help achieve better uniformity in bullet pull. | |||
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Yazid; I have always resized them because there can be necks that out of round or something from them getting banged around in transit or packaging... If nothing else, I at least neck size them prior to reloading new brass... the higher quality of manufacture, probably the less you have to worry about it.. however, Winchester, Remington and Lake City brass, I always at least neck size... the only other one I have used new, locally, was PMC.. I don't use PMC brass, New, Used or otherwise....It is just junk.. as is Sellier and Belloit... to me also... cheers seafire | |||
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if you are going to run a load ladder anyway,.it only makes sense to size all the cases to uniform the necks and external dimensions of the cases. Not to mention I always find a bunch or squared off necks that need rounding out. Difficulty is inevitable Misery is optional | |||
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I also do pretty much the same thing depending on what caliber and gun I am reloading. For my Savage 99, I flrs all new cases. For my ‘03-A3 (6mm) I do the same as DaMan. What I find amazing is the difference in length of new brass. Some are .005†under minimum length. I usually end up trimming to bottom of spec just to make them all kind of uniform. Anybody else find this with new brass? (Winchester and Remington are pretty much all I use) JUST A TYPICAL WHITE GUY BITTERLY CLINGING TO GUNS AND RELIGION Definition of HOPLOPHOBIA "I'm the guy that originally wrote the 'assault weapons' ban." --- Former Vice President Joe Biden | |||
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I neck size, trim to length, & chamfer. Out of every bag of new unprimed or primed brass many of the necks are either dented or out of round in some way. Swede --------------------------------------------------------- NRA Life Member | |||
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Decided to take a shortcut and not resize some new 45 brass. You know, straight walled case, I prebelled the mouth anyway, all that sort of reasoning... After maticuously measuring out powder into 50 of them...I found that the bullet just fell INTO the case when I attempted to seat it. Accuracy is a matter of uniformity as much if not more than component selection. Sizing new cases (unless I intend to only fireform them) assures their uniformity. | |||
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I Do NOT bother with rifle cases. I use a hornady die with eliptical expander or a lyman-m-die and just do the case mouth. The lyman m-die is cheap and does a great job of getting the wrinkles out of the case mouth. I've found that I still get excellent runnout by just doing the above as most factory ammo is actually quite straight according to my runnout gauge. | |||
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