Greetings fellow shooters,
I am building a new wildcat cartridge based on the needs of a local set of hunting restrictions that apply to me. In other words, it is out of necessity that I build the cartridge, and therefore the cartridge design is something which is maybe a bit of an oddball by the more common standards for wildcat cartridge designs.
In an effort not to ramble on about why I am using the parent case that I am using, etc, I will simply state the pertinent details. I'm hoping I can potentially get a little help towards obtaining a set of standards to follow, when taking a straight-wall case, shortening the case, and then bottlenecking it down. When I say, "a set of standards", an example would be, how much sizing to do per step (with each new die), I.E., Is there a ratio to follow based on case wall thickness, or diameter, so that I do not try to squeeze too much diameter down per sizing step? Another question would be, how many steps between annealing stages?
I am going from a case which is 0.635" OD and straight, down to about 0.330" neck, for .30 cal. So it's quite a large transition, which I don't expect to be easy to do without a proper process.
I am turning the dies myself from grade-5 bolts, since it machines quite well.
When making the neck sizing dies, are there any rules to follow about an entry cone shape/angle/size? Obviously I would make a shoulder bump die that gets run last, to create the final shoulder angle, I'm just wondering how I should properly prep for that angle bump during the neck sizing stages.
The neck is going to end up being very short, with a steep shoulder angle alpha of 45°.
I suppose my final question would be concerning prepping the brass wall thickness before neck and shoulder sizing; if I'm starting from brass which has been fire-formed straight, and I indicate off of the outside to ensure each case is centered, can I inside turn the brass thickness down past the entire shoulder to thin it a little in order to aid the sizing process? Or is that a no-no?
Sorry for all my questions. It's a new process for me, and I would just like to know that I will be setting the project up correctly from the start. Thanks for any help that any of you can offer.
I am building a new wildcat cartridge based on the needs of a local set of hunting restrictions that apply to me. In other words, it is out of necessity that I build the cartridge, and therefore the cartridge design is something which is maybe a bit of an oddball by the more common standards for wildcat cartridge designs.
In an effort not to ramble on about why I am using the parent case that I am using, etc, I will simply state the pertinent details. I'm hoping I can potentially get a little help towards obtaining a set of standards to follow, when taking a straight-wall case, shortening the case, and then bottlenecking it down. When I say, "a set of standards", an example would be, how much sizing to do per step (with each new die), I.E., Is there a ratio to follow based on case wall thickness, or diameter, so that I do not try to squeeze too much diameter down per sizing step? Another question would be, how many steps between annealing stages?
I am going from a case which is 0.635" OD and straight, down to about 0.330" neck, for .30 cal. So it's quite a large transition, which I don't expect to be easy to do without a proper process.
I am turning the dies myself from grade-5 bolts, since it machines quite well.
When making the neck sizing dies, are there any rules to follow about an entry cone shape/angle/size? Obviously I would make a shoulder bump die that gets run last, to create the final shoulder angle, I'm just wondering how I should properly prep for that angle bump during the neck sizing stages.
The neck is going to end up being very short, with a steep shoulder angle alpha of 45°.
I suppose my final question would be concerning prepping the brass wall thickness before neck and shoulder sizing; if I'm starting from brass which has been fire-formed straight, and I indicate off of the outside to ensure each case is centered, can I inside turn the brass thickness down past the entire shoulder to thin it a little in order to aid the sizing process? Or is that a no-no?
Sorry for all my questions. It's a new process for me, and I would just like to know that I will be setting the project up correctly from the start. Thanks for any help that any of you can offer.