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one of us |
does this operation give excess pressure? and does the fact that it leaves 4 little crimps on the neck cause the case to split? and does it improve accurracy. many thanks. griff | ||
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I load over 30 calibers and none are crimped. Yes it damages the brass. Yes it damages the bullet, especially thin wall varmit bullets. If you do not neck turn your brass there is defiantly a thick and thin side to the necks. This makes the crimp much stronger on one side than the other. All of these factors affect accuracy. The primary reason that factory ammo is sometimes crimped is for shipping. If they crimp the ammo that is shipped in bulk with no special packaging, the gorillas can throw a case of it off a 5-foot loading dock and if it happens to hit bullet down the case of ammo is not ruined. If you want your bullets tight in your case necks for whatever reason, there are three ways to do it much more uniformly.
Shoot safe, | ||
one of us |
I use the Lee crimp die on these reloads: .22-250, 6mm, 30-06, .338win, .450 AK. I have found that I get more consistant velocity from the .22-250 & 6mm. Accuracy with all cartridges is very good and have had no problems with brass life. If you want to eliminate the "4 little crimps", after you apply the crimp, rotate the case 1/8th turn and crimp again. It will then be a perfect smooth circle. | |||
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one of us |
In loading the .45/70 and .45 colt I have not experienced any problems with the lee crimp dies. ------------------ | |||
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one of us |
thanks for the info guys, Dave tried what you said about turning the case! spot on! thanks to all Griff | |||
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