Vern
Morethan1waytoskinacat
Curiosity.
In 1980 I traded for a 6x47 tight neck BR rifle. My first real BR rifle.
I sighted it in and then went to a match. I took a piece of green scrubber to clean the carbon on the outside of the necks with. I thought it worked great, until about halfway through the match, instead of being able to seat bullets without having to resize the bullets began to fall down the necks. They were finger looooose. There was no sizer die for the gun as it was a tight neck.
I asked one of the experienced shooters and they told me that I had changed the neck thickness just enough that there was no longer enough tension after firing to hold them because of having used the green pad.
That said now days I see a lot of guys using a brass brush or different things to clean the inside of the necks, and using steel wool to clean the outside. This being done after each firing it would seem like that after a few cleanings that the neck thickness would begin to change.
Since all I use to clean the outside of my necks is the die wax on my fingers I dont have anything to check.
Has anyone ever monitored the neck thickness after having done this for a few firings to see if it changes?
In 1980 I traded for a 6x47 tight neck BR rifle. My first real BR rifle.
I sighted it in and then went to a match. I took a piece of green scrubber to clean the carbon on the outside of the necks with. I thought it worked great, until about halfway through the match, instead of being able to seat bullets without having to resize the bullets began to fall down the necks. They were finger looooose. There was no sizer die for the gun as it was a tight neck.
I asked one of the experienced shooters and they told me that I had changed the neck thickness just enough that there was no longer enough tension after firing to hold them because of having used the green pad.
That said now days I see a lot of guys using a brass brush or different things to clean the inside of the necks, and using steel wool to clean the outside. This being done after each firing it would seem like that after a few cleanings that the neck thickness would begin to change.
Since all I use to clean the outside of my necks is the die wax on my fingers I dont have anything to check.
Has anyone ever monitored the neck thickness after having done this for a few firings to see if it changes?