A recent experience with a new procedure in case prep. has me wondering what is a correct amount of neck tightness, when seating bullets.
First, here is what I have been doing up until now:
I have been loading 222 Rem. for my BAT rifle for a couple of years now. I neck size, de-cap and seat bullets with a set of Wilson dies and an arbor press. I clean brass with a Lyman Sonic cleaner. I also have been swabbing out the primer pockets with Q-tips, because the sonic cleaner does not get them completely clean. Then, I let the brass air dry for a couple of days before priming and loading. I have not yet needed to trim any of my Lapua cases. They do not seem to be growing very much.
Because I (finally) plan to compete this spring and summer I am bearing down on my loading technique, especially brass preparation. One thing I have noticed when seating bullets has been uneven resistance. It seems easy to assume cartridges with bullets seated against different resistance will not be giving excellent groups. I also have noticed primers seating with differing resistance. So, just the other day, I finally uniformed all of the primer pockets, and cleaned the inside of the necks of a box of 50 rounds of already fire formed, primed and neck sized Lapua brass. For both of those procedures, I used the proper attachments to a Lyman Case Prep Express that has been sitting unused in my Gun stuff cabinet, since I bought it.
The inside neck brush is nothing more than a rotating nylon brush similar to a barrel cleaning brush. It went in and out of the necks with almost no resistance. It did clean burnt powder off the inside of the necks but removed no other material and seemed to do nothing else, as I had hoped. Then I seated primers in all 50 rounds, fired up my RCBS Chargemaster and started loading powder and bullets.
I was a bit surprised at how little force was required with the bullet seater on the first round I loaded. To be sure the inside neck cleaning brush had not spread the necks, I ran all of the remaining 49 rounds through the neck sizing die again. There seemed to be absolutely no resistance with the neck sizer, so I went ahead and loaded all 50 rounds with my favorite load.
All of the bullets went in with seemingly the same amount of light resistance, so I did achieve the uniformity I was looking for. I will shoot that batch soon to see how they do.
Before you suggest I just buy a tighter neck sizing bushing, I need to mention that I already went down one size from the recommended .247" to a 246" bushing, when I found .247" was not tight enough to keep the occasional failure when a loaded bullet would drop into the case after loading.
I realize my description of the lack of resistance when loading bullets is not precise. None the less, I would appreciate any comments on this. As long as all of the bullets are seated with the same resistance and there is no threat of any of them moving or falling into the case, prior to firing, is everything OK? Can I safely standardize on this new feel, while loading, or is there a problem?
First, here is what I have been doing up until now:
I have been loading 222 Rem. for my BAT rifle for a couple of years now. I neck size, de-cap and seat bullets with a set of Wilson dies and an arbor press. I clean brass with a Lyman Sonic cleaner. I also have been swabbing out the primer pockets with Q-tips, because the sonic cleaner does not get them completely clean. Then, I let the brass air dry for a couple of days before priming and loading. I have not yet needed to trim any of my Lapua cases. They do not seem to be growing very much.
Because I (finally) plan to compete this spring and summer I am bearing down on my loading technique, especially brass preparation. One thing I have noticed when seating bullets has been uneven resistance. It seems easy to assume cartridges with bullets seated against different resistance will not be giving excellent groups. I also have noticed primers seating with differing resistance. So, just the other day, I finally uniformed all of the primer pockets, and cleaned the inside of the necks of a box of 50 rounds of already fire formed, primed and neck sized Lapua brass. For both of those procedures, I used the proper attachments to a Lyman Case Prep Express that has been sitting unused in my Gun stuff cabinet, since I bought it.
The inside neck brush is nothing more than a rotating nylon brush similar to a barrel cleaning brush. It went in and out of the necks with almost no resistance. It did clean burnt powder off the inside of the necks but removed no other material and seemed to do nothing else, as I had hoped. Then I seated primers in all 50 rounds, fired up my RCBS Chargemaster and started loading powder and bullets.
I was a bit surprised at how little force was required with the bullet seater on the first round I loaded. To be sure the inside neck cleaning brush had not spread the necks, I ran all of the remaining 49 rounds through the neck sizing die again. There seemed to be absolutely no resistance with the neck sizer, so I went ahead and loaded all 50 rounds with my favorite load.
All of the bullets went in with seemingly the same amount of light resistance, so I did achieve the uniformity I was looking for. I will shoot that batch soon to see how they do.
Before you suggest I just buy a tighter neck sizing bushing, I need to mention that I already went down one size from the recommended .247" to a 246" bushing, when I found .247" was not tight enough to keep the occasional failure when a loaded bullet would drop into the case after loading.
I realize my description of the lack of resistance when loading bullets is not precise. None the less, I would appreciate any comments on this. As long as all of the bullets are seated with the same resistance and there is no threat of any of them moving or falling into the case, prior to firing, is everything OK? Can I safely standardize on this new feel, while loading, or is there a problem?