Hornady One Shot

I only use it as a lube on pistol cases. I tried it with rifle with poor results.

From what I understand, there are actually 2 different formulas - one is more of a cleaner that leaves a dry lube, the other is specifcally a lube. Double check to make sure you have the right one for your application.

For rifle cases, I'm still a fan of the Dillon case lube. I'm sure the RCBS stuff (and likely some others) is exactly the same - it just works. My stuck cases dropped to zero since going with it (and I'm not a Dillon homer either). Good stuff.

The Hornady One Shot is great for lubing things like the ram on the press, or for protection of your gun after cleaning, but it is a poor rifle case lube.
 
Oi! This again.:D

The aerosol is OK. Not great, but OK. I usually spray thicker than with most spray lubes & the "wait 5 minutes" is a must.

The eco-green pump stuff is almost as good as coating your brass with sand & epoxy.:eek:
 
If used as the directions state, I have no problems with the stuff. Specifically, use a loading block, spray inside and out of case, and wait 5 minutes after spraying.
If you skip anyone of those 3, you are gonna be taking dies out of your press and cutting brass off the decapping stem.
 
Would suggest not using it, especially not for rifle cases. Too iffy and could end up with a stuck case. For rifle, use RCBS Case Lube -2 instead with a roll on pad.
 
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Good results for me on straight wall handgun rounds (all I have used it on to date). I normally use a gallon size freezer bag or larger depending on amount of cases prepping to go into the 650 hopper, spray the inside of the bag real good, drop the brass in, zip up, and roll/shake it up good - then let set while filling primer tubes. I dump the brass in the hopper and it is definitely a lot easier to deprime and resize than without using it...
 
thanks for the thoughts, guys. Yep I used the right stuff. I swear the original product was more waxy. Dug out my very old lube pad and got reacquainted with shoulder dents.
 
I for one have had no issues with Hornady One Shot aerosol lube. I have used it for several thousand rifles cases (use carbide dies for handgun so do not lube handgun cases), and have never stuck a case.

I actually love the stuff. It works as it should, and it cleans off completely in the ultrasonic cleaner.
 
I use the One Shot aresol lube on rifle cases and love it. I followed the directions and it works like a charm. A little goes a long ways. I've done probably 150 .243 cases and there's enough in the can to do that many again +
 
Its not spray lubes in general.

I use & like the Dillon spray or the Frankford Arsenal stuff from Midway with no issues. For some reason the Hornady needs more than the others do.
I make my own now anyway so its a moot point for me, but even Hornady themselves don't think much of the pump stuff.
 
I've used One Shot for years without issues. Cases in a loading block, spray, turn 180 degrees spray again, wait, then size/decap. Always works fine.
 
I've followed the directions and never had a problem. But when my supply is gone I think I'll look for something else. Seems like it might just be a matter of time before I do have a problem based on multiple threads about it.
 
I used RCBS lube on a pad for years.
I've used Imperial sizing wax for 50BMG cases.
I got started with Dillon spray lube and liked it, but ....
Now I make my own using Lanolin oil, 99% alcohol, and mix them in proper ratio using heated oil.
No more dents, better consistency on re-sizing, easier cleanup.

Have a can of 1-shot, never used it. On shelf someplace ??????
 
Follow up to my earlier post suggesting non-use of One-Shot:
The one time I tried One-Shot was with some '06 cases after completely running out of RCBS Case Lube-2. Actually worked OK and thought it would be good with other brass. Over 90% of my loading is with heavier belted mag cases but my first attempt with one almost ended up as a stuck case so that was the end of that. Immediately checked other sources and found additional Case Lube-2. So it could be that it works well with lighter cases but not others. Posters speaking positively of One-Shot do not seem to indicate what rifle brass calibers they use it with.
 
One shot is my least favorite of all the spray lubes. I had a x39 get stuck and it always gets stuck when forming 300blk. Have switched to Lyman spray and no issues whatsoever.
 
I've been using RCBS lube with a lube pad since 1975ish and have had really good luck, no stuck cases. If you are getting shoulder dents you are using way to much lube. Put a few drops on the pad, work in with your finger, roll the cases lightly on the pad and you're ready.
 
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