Jump to content
308AR.com Community
  • Visit Aero Precision
  • Visit Brownells
  • Visit EuroOptic
  • Visit Site
  • Visit Beachin Tactical
  • Visit Rainier Arms
  • Visit Ballistic Advantage
  • Visit Palmetto State Armory
  • Visit Cabelas
  • Visit Sportsmans Guide

Recommended Posts

Posted
20 hours ago, Lonewolf McQuade said:

This is done by setting die that much deeper?

It takes measurement of the case after you size it, and the adjustment of the sizing die.  After that, you'll get "the feel" and hit it every time. 

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Replies 61
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

I am a little late to the party, but have a question. I understand the desirability of using a small base resizing die for an autoloader. I also noticed a lot of you use Lee dies. Are these "small base"? I find no reference for small base dies on Lees web site. 

Posted
7 minutes ago, shrade said:

I am a little late to the party, but have a question. I understand the desirability of using a small base resizing die for an autoloader. I also noticed a lot of you use Lee dies. Are these "small base"? I find no reference for small base dies on Lees web site. 

Me either. I ended up buying RCBS small base die set

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
6 hours ago, Radioactive said:

I have never used a case gauge in all my years reloading. Never really had a need for one. I guess as a quick trim needed indicator it would be useful but calipers work for me.

Thanks, I wasn't sure if it showed any deformation even if cases measure  within spec or what. 

 

Posted

i use them on all calibers i reload.  they show case length min/max. they will show shoulder problems. after running case through resizer you can check it with case guage to make sure it will chamber. after cartridge is reloaded you can check if it will chamber. a case guage is a very useful tool

21 hours ago, Lonewolf McQuade said:

Anybody use these? Necessary, just helpful, or useless?

 

Screenshot_20200922-014633.jpg

 

Posted
7 minutes ago, sagebrush said:

i use them on all calibers i reload.  they show case length min/max. they will show shoulder problems. after running case through resizer you can check it with case guage to make sure it will chamber. after cartridge is reloaded you can check if it will chamber. a case guage is a very useful tool

 

Thank You 

Posted

Lyman has a billet machined block that does a bunch of different cases, in one.  They have a couple of these.  Then, they have the individual ones, per caliber.  Depending on what you load, you might want to check the ones that do several common calibers.  If you're shooting something weird, you'll need the individual gauge.

image.jpeg.bd88a9b3b48c34a717f21166739ec186.jpeg

Posted
1 minute ago, 98Z5V said:

Lyman has a billet machined block that does a bunch of different cases, in one.  They have a couple of these.  Then, they have the individual ones, per caliber.  Depending on what you load, you might want to check the ones that do several common calibers.  If you're shooting something weird, you'll need the individual gauge.

image.jpeg.bd88a9b3b48c34a717f21166739ec186.jpeg

Interesting,  I haven't seen those before.   

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...