It's a custom .22-250. Trued Remington action, Lilja 27inch 1in14 barrel.
Bullets: 52gr Sierra MKs, Hornady A-Maxes and Bergers.
Powder: Varget and IMR 4895
Primers: Federal 210 and 210M, CCI 250
Brass: Winchester virgin
Dies: Redding
Press: Forster Co-Ax
Powder Measure: RCBS Uniflow
Scale RCBS 5-0-5
I have some other cool tools too; Wilson Case Trimmer, Sinclair Primer Pocket Uniformer, K&M Primer Seater, NECO "Neck Lube" moly kit, etc.
Of course bullet choice and powder charge are big variables. The one that really has me stumped is how far off the lands do I seat the bullet to start off with?
Thanks, LDO
Good luck!
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Regards
Richard
Then I back off the case and screw the seating punch in one full turn. This is about 1/32" on most dies.
quote:I start at the rifling and work the load up there....then when I get the load I want for velocity ect. I experiment with seating depth..and if you start at touch then you only have one way to go instead of back and then closer.....but many of my 22's like the 10 to 15 off spot...this was not my idea but I believe Sinclair's book suggest this? and another thing this avoids is having to worry about pressure increase as you get closer/touching the lands.....good luck and good shooting!!!
Originally posted by LongDistanceOperator:
I'm about to load up some ammo for the first time on my own. (I have loaded some match ammo for my BR rifle, but only with an established load and supervised by a friend....1300 miles away)It's a custom .22-250. Trued Remington action, Lilja 27inch 1in14 barrel.
Bullets: 52gr Sierra MKs, Hornady A-Maxes and Bergers.
Powder: Varget and IMR 4895Primers: Federal 210 and 210M, CCI 250
Brass: Winchester virgin
Dies: Redding
Press: Forster Co-Ax
Powder Measure: RCBS Uniflow
Scale RCBS 5-0-5
I have some other cool tools too; Wilson Case Trimmer, Sinclair Primer Pocket Uniformer, K&M Primer Seater, NECO "Neck Lube" moly kit, etc.
Of course bullet choice and powder charge are big variables. The one that really has me stumped is how far off the lands do I seat the bullet to start off with?
Thanks, LDO
Someone, somewhere just HAS to make a uniformer for the Wilson Case Trimmer. I mean gee, it seems like a natural. That beautiful design; just turn around the case holder and switch cutter/handle. And with a power attachment.....oh boy!
Bigdaddytacp-
Are you a USAF vet?
Please post if you find something that can make this a speedier and easier thing to do.
If you are this new to loading on your own , I recomend you use the published COL from your data books . Finding the distance off the lands isn't rocket science . But a mistake could become quite dangerous . Get with your mentor and under his/her guidence learn the method.
As for wearing out your hand and wrist uniforming primer pockets and flash holes , consider buying an RCBS caseprep center . Five rotating "sockets" that you can screw in your uniformers , deburing ,champhering tools .
muck
Also, I move the tool back and forth between hands, giving each hand two motions instead of just one.
Good music on the sound system helps!
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.223 Ackley Improved Wildcat Forum:
http://www.hotboards.com/plus/plus.mirage?who=223ackleyimproved
Sinclair and K&M both offer uniformers that can be used with an electric screwdriver. Gonna have to get one of those FOR SURE.
It's true that due to the form of the tool that you must dump the chips if they are substantial.
I put my uniformer in a lathe collet and hold the case by hand. But I have been doing stuff like that with deburring tools etc. on lathes for a long time. Be carefull if you try something like that.
But I don't see why you could not chuck the tool in a secured drill and feed it in by hand. I have looked at the primer pocket walls and I don't see any metal removed there even though I can tell that the tool is not aligned perfectly each time.
I got a batch of WW .300 H&H brass where the primers would not seat flush at all. I really needed the tool for those. Most of the time it just cleans up the surface.
I'm loading up the Bergers first. The flat base has me somewhat concerned. If it had a boattail, that could rest inside the neck. These just kinda sit on top of the neck. When I run the case into the seater die, can I just move it rrrrrreal slow and let the die straighten the bullet? I'm stumped.
If you really get into reloading lots and lots of rounds, do like Muck says and get an RCBS Trim Mate. It will run around $80 on sale, not cheap but less expensive than carpal tunnel surgery. For about $40 more you can get a large and small primer pocket uniformer, plus large and small primer crimp remover for military brass, that all fit on the rotary, elctric powered Trim Mate. I load somewhere in the range of 8000 or more rounds per year, and the Trim Mate is a God send. Welcome to reloading where no one ever saved a dime, but you do get to pull the trigger lots more. --------Chainsaw
I have a VibraShine electric powder trickler. I used it one time. It spits out powder too fast for me. I'm getting the battery-powered blue one from Midway. I like it a lot better. It has a threaded tube that rotates and carries powder along the threads. Drops out the powder nice and slow.