The last brass I turned I expanded it with an expander to match the carbide mandrel in my Pumpkin turner. Chucked the neck turner in a three jaw chuck and then fed the case neck into the neck turner using the tail stock on my lathe. Held the case with a Sinclair drill holder. Never turned off the lathe while I was turning necks and turned a box of .220 Russian cases in an hour. As good a way as any I've found for turning necks if you happen to have a lathe.
May i ask how you put the pumpkin in the lathe without putting bit markers from the jaws on the pumpkin?
what speed do you run your lathe
I currently turn my necks with a pumpkin but use a drill and think i could get better results with a lathe..
Thank you
Trevor
Get a sizing mandrel that matches your turner....or get a turner mandrel that matches your sizing mandrel. Not too tight, not too loose. That's where the guys with a lathe have it over us regular ol' guys. Once you have that out of the way, turn your cases however you wish.
All you really do here is make the case neck fit the chamber. Sure, the better you do it the better you feel but perfect is no better on the target than pretty good. There's near perfect case necks at the bottom of any match results.
As alinwa says...opinions by Wilbur...
Wilbur, through the years, I have checked a lot of cases turned by various shooters.
From a machinist point of view, many were worse than when they started as far as consistency of neck thickness.
Jackie - There's nothing involved in my question other than giving those that shoot these days some straight info. What worked for me is history. You wrote that most necks you measured were not "perfect" and I'm saying I agree with that. Just so we'll have at least two points of interest:
How did those imperfect necks you measured place in the shootin' match - generally speaking?
Keep in mind that I'm not saying that perfect necks is not good. I am saying that perfect necks is not better.
I expand, trim, then neck turn on a lathe. Mandrels matched throughout.
-Lee
Trevor, I wrap the front part of the Pumkin with a piece of worn out 600 grit shop roll about an inch wide, then indicate the mandrel in with the adjust tru chuck. That will still let you make slight adjustments with the back ring on the Pumkin. I was wrong though about the chuck I'm using as I have it set up in a Buck 6 jaw chuck.