A little press and sizing report:
I have several presses, and picked up another because I have been wanting to try the Lock-n-Load feature. I got such a deal on a Hornady Classic that I picked it up, figuring that I could always get my money out of it.
It sat around for a couple of weeks till i finally bolted it to a double thickness of 3/4" plywood ( I wanted to keep it compact, so I had it cut 5" x 9') and C clamped that to my old desk to give it a try. It works just fine. A sixteenth turn is all that it takes to change dies, and with the primer seater in place, the spent primers all end up in a plastic box that clips to the frame, behind the ram; no more primers on the floor.
The next part of this is about a multiple sizing process that I have to do for some of my brass in one caliber.
Because I have a good quantity of .220 Swift brass that started its life as premium factory ammunition, and because that brass has thicker than average necks, I had CH/4D ream out the neck of one of there FL dies, after having the shoulder and base diameters measured to determine that the die was not going to move fired brass very much in the body. (such service!) Anyway, all was good, except that this made the neck of the die slightly too large to size brass having more ordinary neck thickness. All was not lost however. I have a Collet die, and I don't load so much for this caliber that two step sizing process will be a problem. OK, so whats the big deal? The big deal is that in comparing the concentricity produced by using the dies in different orders I found a surprise or two. the best results came when I brushed out the necks, put them through the Collet die, lubed them, put them through the FL die, where I could barely feel the expander ball. Brass done this way was noticeably straighter than brass that was FL sized and then neck sized with the Collet Die. Runout done with the FL sizing done first ran around .002 at the end of the neck. Using the Collet first gave me .001, this with unturned necks, it will be interesting to see what this gives on a seated bullet.
Next, I plan on playing with some once fired .22-250 brass using a Redding Body die, and a Collet Die.