This will be for 308 but will be needing one in 223 as well at some point .
I just bought the Sinclair concentricity gauge https://www.brownells.com/reloading...s/sinclair-concentricity-gauge-prod37479.aspx
Just been playing around with it but it seems to show my FL sizing does pretty good with the worst my necks are off are .0015 . That's likely the neck wall thickness variance because I use the expander button . So my guess is my case prep is fine since I don't turn my necks and I seem to have fairly concentric necks .
My bullets are anywhere from .003 to .006 depending on the loading components . I say components because although both my LC-14 and LC-12-lr cases only have .0015 neck run out . when using the same bullets the LC-14 cases have .005 runout while the LC-12-lr only have .0025 .
Maybe this is normal but seems odd to me . Case prep is pretty much the same regardless of what I'm prepping so what's causing the LC-14 brass to allow the bullet to have more run out then others ?
Any tips and or hints to help use and understand the gauge would be appreciated .
I'm assuming since my cases are sized pretty consistently . The problem is my seater die . I use the standard Redding seater die with the after market micrometer stem insert .
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1012570742/redding-seater-die
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/101263582/redding-bullet-seating-micrometer
Although pretty cool and doo seem to work pretty well . I may be willing to step up in quality and precision . Obviously the Redding competition seater die is the front runner . How ever I run a few compressed loads ( less in 308 then 223 ) but still do in both . I've read that the Redding seater stem or what ever it's called is on a spring and compressed load can result in inconsistent seating depths ?????
So my next choice is the Forster seating die https://www.midwayusa.com/product/395095/forster-ultra-micrometer-seater-die
Only because I've heard it does better with compressed loads ?????
If there's something else you recommend , please do and I'll consider it .
Thanks Metal
I just bought the Sinclair concentricity gauge https://www.brownells.com/reloading...s/sinclair-concentricity-gauge-prod37479.aspx
Just been playing around with it but it seems to show my FL sizing does pretty good with the worst my necks are off are .0015 . That's likely the neck wall thickness variance because I use the expander button . So my guess is my case prep is fine since I don't turn my necks and I seem to have fairly concentric necks .
My bullets are anywhere from .003 to .006 depending on the loading components . I say components because although both my LC-14 and LC-12-lr cases only have .0015 neck run out . when using the same bullets the LC-14 cases have .005 runout while the LC-12-lr only have .0025 .
Maybe this is normal but seems odd to me . Case prep is pretty much the same regardless of what I'm prepping so what's causing the LC-14 brass to allow the bullet to have more run out then others ?
Any tips and or hints to help use and understand the gauge would be appreciated .
I'm assuming since my cases are sized pretty consistently . The problem is my seater die . I use the standard Redding seater die with the after market micrometer stem insert .
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1012570742/redding-seater-die
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/101263582/redding-bullet-seating-micrometer
Although pretty cool and doo seem to work pretty well . I may be willing to step up in quality and precision . Obviously the Redding competition seater die is the front runner . How ever I run a few compressed loads ( less in 308 then 223 ) but still do in both . I've read that the Redding seater stem or what ever it's called is on a spring and compressed load can result in inconsistent seating depths ?????
So my next choice is the Forster seating die https://www.midwayusa.com/product/395095/forster-ultra-micrometer-seater-die
Only because I've heard it does better with compressed loads ?????
If there's something else you recommend , please do and I'll consider it .
Thanks Metal