Neck Turning Tool

J

JDeBon

Guest
Does anyone have a recommendation on a power neck turning tool? I'm using Lapua .220 Russian brass to make 6MM PPC, and with a hand turner it's taking forever, not to mention my hand goes numb.
 
Try using a K&M or similar case holder that has a 1/4" hex drive that can be driven by a B&D/Milwaukee battery powered inline screw driver.
 
Several companies make a shellholder that can be chucked in a varible speed drill. You then turn the case and hold your hand held neck turner.
I use a Lee and it works great with my K&M micro adjustable neck turner on my 22 PPC and 6.5X284. I usually make two to three passes to get down to the neck thickness I want. I have done it in one pass but think that the neck is not as uniform when I'm done.
 
I use a 18 volt drill,(frank parkers idea),,, varible speed, runs slow,quick twist of chuck to insert/remove brass, forester neckturning tool and a mix of pro gold & STP to lube inside and outside, hell it works better than a case lathe we bought for more $$,,,, go figure,,,,,,,,,,,,

the wind is my friend

DD
 
Lately all of my PPC necks have been turned with whatever Ron Hoehn is using :) It's already weight sorted also.
 
I use a K&M tool with Ron Hoehn's carbide extra length mandrels. I chuck the tool in a 140 rpm drill press and use a holder like the old two piece tap wrenches to grip the solid web portion of the case. The expander is dressed down to .001" over the turner's mandrel size to achieve a very precise fit when turning. The carbide mandrel does not gall or pick up brass and heating is a lot less than the tool steel mandrel. The insides of the necks come off the mandrel looking burnished and tolerances on neck wall thickness are superb. I have turned 500 necks for a tight neck varmint rifle in one afternoon with this setup. Works great.
 
If you want to stay with the turner you have, Sinclair Intl. sells a case driver (~$25 for holder and driver) that's worked really well for me. For doing.223 brass in volume for Highpower, I use a Gracey Neck Shaver. I do everything else with a Sinclair turner and driver.
 
How I do quantity case neck turning

I use this Forester case holder and a Sinclair tool. The tool is chucked in a double ended mandrel in my drill press set on lowest speed. Use a real good lube like PG2000 on the outside and inside of the neck by dipping the case neck into a very shallow puddle of the lube. I keep my lube in a bottle cap. (white thingy in first photo)

The case turner is spinning so don't run your hand into it. It'll hurt and bend your mandrel.
A smooth and steady feed, in and out, makes a nice cut.

First photo shows the overall set up.

Second shows the doughnut pushed to the outside by expanding the case neck twice before turning. (may not apply to your forming, this is my .30BR)

Third shows the final result.
 

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I use this Forester case holder and a Sinclair tool. The tool is chucked in a double ended mandrel in my drill press set on lowest speed. Use a real good lube like PG2000 on the outside and inside of the neck by dipping the case neck into a very shallow puddle of the lube. I keep my lube in a bottle cap. (white thingy in first photo)

The case turner is spinning so don't run your hand into it. It'll hurt and bend your mandrel.
A smooth and steady feed, in and out, makes a nice cut.

First photo shows the overall set up.

Second shows the doughnut pushed to the outside by expanding the case neck twice before turning. (may not apply to your forming, this is my .30BR)

Third shows the final result.

THIS is what makes this forum so awesome.

THANKS henrya


al
 
With much mentoring.......

.......from the guys on this forum, I built the turning set-up below. The K&M turner system works very well.

One note though......for best neckwall uniformity, one end of the turning set-up must be allowed to "float".......because cases are not absolutely straight. Especially, formed cases.

Hope this helps.

Kevin
GrMtrFinal111806.jpg
 
Many, many THANKS to all who have replied! I now have a great deal more options to solve my dilema thanks to all!
 
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