one of us
| I suspect that you are correct about the capacity of the reformed WW brass being greater than Starline. My experience with WW brass is that it consistently seems to have a tad more capacity than other manufacturers, and that in 20th century American military calibers, Remington is about equal to GI brass for capacity.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know. - Groucho Marx
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| Posts: 3889 | Location: Eastern Slope, Colorado, USA | Registered: 01 March 2001 |  
IP
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One of Us
| When you form 40-65 cases from 45-70 it will make the neck thicker and may be a problem with a tight chamber when using a .410 bullet. I have to neck turn mine. |
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one of us
| quote: Originally posted by sharpsguy: RIP's Pedersoli takes a .408 bullet.
True, Bill. I have RCBS 3-die that is marked for ".410" and I have a Lyman neck die and a Lyman crimp die. I think I have it covered, for .408 bullets. As it happens, both my Starline and WW brass (formed from 45-70) seem to have same neck wall thickness, about 0.012". Thickening neck brass from sizing down .45-70 might be perfect with .408 bullets and the RCBS dies. Maybe the WW 45-70 neck wall was thinner to start with? Rounds of Starline and .409 bullet chambered OK. It can only get better from that .409/440-grain bullet load.  |
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one of us
| Saeco mould #740 (.408-410 400-grainer) and #640 (.408-.410 370-grainer) are on "back order."  |
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one of us
| quote: Lyman 410655
Available. On the way. Nominally a .406-.410/400-grain bullet mould, but 420-grain bullet in 1-20 alloy? |
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