Ok so I measured the outside diameter of the necks at the pressure ring and this is what I got. (Lapua .2725")(Norma .2655")
So with a .265" chamber and .002" neck clearance the Lapua needs .00475" turned off and the Norma needs .00125".
Resultant case necks would be .010" and use .260-259" bushing for .001-.002" neck tension.
The Norma would be a one pass neck turn/cleanup and the Lapua would be more traditional amount with neither having necks supper thin.
Does this seem like a good approach that would allow me to use both sources of brass?
Will the Norma clean up with such a shallow cut? Should I go down to .264"??
Thanks,
K. Hawes
I happen to be one of the old school who doesn't know and doesn't care how much I turn from my necks. The only thing that really counts is what my OD dimension is with a bullet seated in a loaded round in reference to my neck chamber and the amount of clearance I want to achieve.
If my neck chamber was .265" and I wanted .002" of total clearance, I would turn till the loaded round at the pressure ring measured .263". If I wanted .001" of tension, I'd use a .262" bushing. If I wanted .002" of tension, I'd use a 261" bushing, If I wanted .003" I'd use a .260" bushing.
When turning, I turn, seat a bullet in the neck of a dummy round, measure the OD of the neck at the pressure ring, If it meets my requirement I'm done. If it doesn't, I adjust my turner to take off more brass, then turn, and keep progressing until I achieve my goal. If at that point you want to determine how much you turned off go ahead and measure it. Once set, I dedicate my K&M turner for the OD dimension I achieved, and never touch it. To me they're inexpensive enough to have one dedicated to a specific OD for a specific caliber.
Regardless of which brand of brass I was using for my .265" neck chamber size and the desire for .002" of clearance and a loaded round OD of .263", that turner as set up, would achieve it. How much brass did it take off the brand with thicker neck? Who cares? In the end I got the OD dimension I was looking for. The one thing I would do religiously, while progressing, is to measure at least 1 in 10 or 1 in 5 of my dummy rounds at the pressure ring, to make sure nothing had changed mechanically with my turner.