7 or 8 ogive dies will handle 0.925" and 1.00" (and probably longer too). For .30 BR and variants, most folks go up to 116 gr in the 0.925" and 116 - 125 with the 1.00"; give or take. The ogive also plays into what weight you shoot. While definitely not a written in stone rule, the higher the ogive, the lighter you can go. Basically, if you drop the column height enough with a lower ogive, less lead is pushed up into the point. Conversely, a higher ogive is pointed enough to squeeze the top edge more. I'm probably not explaining this well, so illustrated:
My .30 caliber bullets are done on 7-ogive Ulrich dies. From the start, I swaged them at 114 grs and they shoot great. Last winter, I toyed with the column height and tried a 111 gr.
Left - 111 gr, Right -114 gr
If the 111 gr was formed as an 8 ogive, there would be more lead pushed into the point. And this is where you get deep into CoF vs CoG discussions. I shot the 111 and the 114 side-by-side for a few weeks. While both performed well, the 114 groups tighter (by ~0.05" on average). Rather than overthink the 'why', I let the paper do the talking. And that's the key. Targets always trump theory. If you get into swaging, don't be afraid to alter the bullet (weight, bearing surface, meplat), shoot lots of targets, and take copious notes.
-Lee
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