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One of Us |
Anyone got experience in using this die and what is the benefits compared to a regular NS die (not from the advertisement but from the real life as a reloader ) Thanks Bjarne | ||
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One of Us |
No one using these dies or? Thanks Bjarne | |||
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one of us |
sorry - no real-life experience here. i use the lee collet neck-sizer dies with great results! RCBS puts out grreat stuff and their customer service is right at the top - should be a good, safe purchase. | |||
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One of Us |
Try posting on SnipersHide. Somebody on there uses the seating dies. I'm unsure of the sizers. ________________________ "Every country has the government it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre | |||
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One of Us |
BTT | |||
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One of Us |
I do use a neck bushing die, but I use a couple of Reddings and not the RCBS. No particular reason, it's just what I have. Nothing wrong with the RCBS die I'm sure. I'm wanting a set for 17 Rem with the seater die and the neck bushing die, but just haven't ordered the set yet. I like the design of the "bullet window" on the RCBS seater die. Basically the benefit is in being able to "tune" the neck diameter to fit the diameter of your brass in your chamber. The most benefit is achieved with a custom neck chamber in your barrel, and with neck turning your brass to a specific thickness. Then you pick a corresponding bushing diameter to give you the desired neck tension on your brass you are after. It's kind of a combined-effect process. Let's say you have a cartridge in, say .223 diameter, and you turn your brass necks to, say .012 thickness, then you would want a bushing die to take into account the bullet diameter and the combined thickness of 2 sides of the neck: .223+.012+.012=.247 And let's say you have a target neck tension of .001. You would want a bushing size of .246 to put .001's worth of neck tension on your bullet. Ideally all this is done in a custom chamber cut "tighter" than normal, say around .248-.249, maybe as big as .250. Of course you will want a couple of bushing sizes on either side of your "target" diameter, for load tuning purposes until you figure out what to run with. I think most of this would be a waste of time in a factory barrel with a stock cut chamber though. I hope that answered your question, it's been a long day at work and I'm pretty tired. Let me know if it didn't make sense! Si tantum EGO eram dimidium ut bonus ut EGO memor | |||
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One of Us |
Slim explained it well. You might ask about similar dies and get more answers. Redding introduced bushing neck a few years ago. L E Wilson dies have been used by benchrest competitors probably more than 40 years. The Wilson dies are used with a small arbor press or with a plastic hammer but are still bushing dies and allow you to change the bushing diameter in .001 inch increments. Forster also markets a bushing die but I believe it also bumps the shoulder back. Like screw in chokes taking more than half a century to be widely accepted, bushing dies are taking way to long to be adopted across the board. | |||
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