M
maxguerz
Guest
you know the advantages to the neck 0.268 compared to 0.263(6PPC)?Better accuracy or just more lasting brass?I heard that Boyer and other shooters use thanks
Norma is thin and is to thin for 268
263 will work
Are you guys shure about this .268 thing ? I played with a .269 chamber once,didn't like it. It was death grip or nothin'. OK with a 133 heavy neck tension set up but worthless with an 8208 light neck tension setup. With competition 6ppc "finesse" is the name of the game. Finesse with seating depth,finesse with powder charge and finesse with neck tension. I lost that with the .269 chamber. I also found that bullets were distorted during the seating process with that muscle bound neck. Bad Ju-Ju
Joel
Max,
It seems that the majority of people think that .268 will shoot as good as, but no better than, .262. The advantage is less time and trouble turning necks.
The question is how much neck tension with the thicker (.268) when shooting VV N133. It seems like a good place to start is with .001 or .002.
Got that all worked out for you. Learned it the hard way.
For the thicker necks, i.e., 268 and 269 the sizing die bushing should be .001 smaller than the loaded round. Never more than .0015 smaller. For a 269 neck, the cases should be turned to .0120 which results in a loaded round diameter of .267. The proper bushing is .2660 and I usually keep a .2655 in reserve in case I encounter bullets that are slightly undersize. Of course, for a 268 neck, everything is .001 smaller. I have found quite a bit of runout in some off the shelf bushings. That's why I chose to special order my own carbide bushings. They are straight and right on the money size wise. I've got a batch of them in the works at this time. If you have any special requests, get in touch with me. If you have never used carbide bushings, you should try them. They put a nice smooth, burnished finish on the necks with NO scratches and come in .0005 increments. Cheap? No, sorry. But what in benchrest is?
Gene Beggs
Gene,
I've mic'd steel and carbide bushings that were out ( measuring top to bottom parallel) How do you check a bushing ? How do you measure the inside channel as being perpendicular to the top of the bushing ? Forgive my lack of machinist jargon.Just want better bushings.
Joel