Free: Contests & Raffles.
Beware!!! You know when reloading has become more than a hobby when you find a set of odd-ball dies at a yard sale and then go out and buy a RIFLE to match.
One note, only bump the shoulder on your belted cases. After the first firing treat it as a normal beltless case and your case life will increase dramatically and won't have the separation that so many worry about with belted mags.
Quote from: rbros on December 27, 2013, 03:22:41 PMOne note, only bump the shoulder on your belted cases. After the first firing treat it as a normal beltless case and your case life will increase dramatically and won't have the separation that so many worry about with belted mags. Basically using a full length sizing die to almost neck size only. -Steve
Buy the die you can afford. I have RCBS, Redding, Lyman, Herter's, Lee and maybe a couple other's. My favorite are the Redding. They don't do a better job than the other's but the finish on them is super.
Quote from: JackOfAllTrades on December 27, 2013, 03:36:26 PMQuote from: rbros on December 27, 2013, 03:22:41 PMOne note, only bump the shoulder on your belted cases. After the first firing treat it as a normal beltless case and your case life will increase dramatically and won't have the separation that so many worry about with belted mags. Basically using a full length sizing die to almost neck size only. -SteveKinda, but it does more. A neck sizing die only sizes the neck and none of the body.
I guess my cheap ole Lyman neck sizer for my 30-06 isn't out of spec then.. Because I haven't used the full length die in 25 years. As a matter of fact, I think I stole the decapper pin out of it years ago. Never had a problem ejecting cases. 100's maybe even 1,000's of rounds... Some people seem to take things way too far... I said to the OP was that he'd be fine with a two die set, and down the road he might want a neck sizer die. And I explained why. That's it. It is not a dispute about whether to neck size or not. -Steve