4
4Mesh
Guest
Sure,
Well, My brother made a dieset up that goes in the punchpress here at work. It's a Minster 50 ton. You put a gagepin in the primer pocket and go around the case and when done, the primer pocket IS smaller. I use a 206 pin. I have always wanted to do an operation to make these smaller before firing to have the first work hardening be in the reducing direction, rather than expanding. It's as of the metal likes to go to where the farthest excursion has been, and since it is springing back after firing, it tends to want to go larger. Once closed back up, they last a whole lot nicer than they did when new, and I get a ton more firings from brass. Fact is, I go till the necks crack and if they still shoot, keep right on going even then. I don't think I've hit a piece of brass like that more than twice, and have always wondered if they would work even better if they got it when they came annealed (or nearly so when new)
Well, My brother made a dieset up that goes in the punchpress here at work. It's a Minster 50 ton. You put a gagepin in the primer pocket and go around the case and when done, the primer pocket IS smaller. I use a 206 pin. I have always wanted to do an operation to make these smaller before firing to have the first work hardening be in the reducing direction, rather than expanding. It's as of the metal likes to go to where the farthest excursion has been, and since it is springing back after firing, it tends to want to go larger. Once closed back up, they last a whole lot nicer than they did when new, and I get a ton more firings from brass. Fact is, I go till the necks crack and if they still shoot, keep right on going even then. I don't think I've hit a piece of brass like that more than twice, and have always wondered if they would work even better if they got it when they came annealed (or nearly so when new)