Learning

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

druryj

In Remembrance / Dec 27 2021
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
21,469
Reaction score
17,724
Location
Yukon, OK
Isn't this cool? I like all the solid advice being given. I am thinking this thread is exactly what OSA is really all about. As far as your questions, I have nothing to add; these fellers seem to have it covered.
 

Aries

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Feb 1, 2019
Messages
5,550
Reaction score
8,122
Location
Sapulpa
I used one of those Lee trimmers for years, and they work just fine, if you use an electric drill with it, you can trim and chamfer with very little effort.

I like this one even better, I just use it with the hand crank and it's not much more trouble than shoving it up a resizer die. Eliminates the chamfer step.

https://leeprecision.com/case-conditioning-tools/case-trimming-tools/
 

DRC458

Sharpshooter
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Mar 1, 2006
Messages
11,563
Reaction score
10,932
Location
Enid, OK.
I still use the Forster hand crank trimmer I've had for years. If I'm gonna' be trimming a lot of cases, I made an adapter that I can put on the shaft to allow me to use a drill. Trimming cases is easily my least favorite thing about reloading!
 

swampratt

Sharpshooter
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Nov 3, 2010
Messages
12,801
Reaction score
19,557
Location
yukon ok
I have a .308 quick trim by Lee and I must not have used it enough to get the feel of it as all my cases are much different lengths when finished and I like a VLD chamfer. In the drawer it went.
 

NightShade

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Apr 24, 2013
Messages
4,116
Reaction score
1,812
Location
Guthrie
I used one of those Lee trimmers for years, and they work just fine, if you use an electric drill with it, you can trim and chamfer with very little effort.

I like this one even better, I just use it with the hand crank and it's not much more trouble than shoving it up a resizer die. Eliminates the chamfer step.

https://leeprecision.com/case-conditioning-tools/case-trimming-tools/

Same and switched to the power adapter for when I convert 223/556 to 300BLK. It makes a long tedious job go pretty fast. Never had an issue with major size difference with it unless the case was a little short to begin with and very seldom have one not in spec.

As far as starting with rifle cases I agree they are better, straight wall or not it's just a lot easier to work with when the difference from min to max load is larger. Pistol loads may be two or three tenths of a grain between minimum and max load and a rifle case may be larger than a full grain. There is a lot more wiggle room to work with there. Then when you are consistent and comfortable with what you are doing move to something smaller.
 

Glock 40

Problem Solver
Special Hen
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
6,282
Reaction score
9,523
Location
Tulsa
Can I sneak a question in here? In the other thread folks were talking about lubing cases before resizing. I have watched a lot of videos. It seems everyone is cleaning the brass then resizing. On this site I thought someone said they resized before cleaning then the cleaning process removed the oil. Can it be done either way? Also what happens if oil gets into the case and you load it?
 

djcorrell

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Jun 22, 2010
Messages
657
Reaction score
9
Location
Oklahoma City
Can I sneak a question in here? In the other thread folks were talking about lubing cases before resizing. I have watched a lot of videos. It seems everyone is cleaning the brass then resizing. On this site I thought someone said they resized before cleaning then the cleaning process removed the oil. Can it be done either way? Also what happens if oil gets into the case and you load it?

Lube rifle. No need to on pistol. I'm sure there are exceptions.
 

Cowcatcher

Unarmed boating accident survivor
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Dec 22, 2017
Messages
6,171
Reaction score
13,853
Location
Inola
Can I sneak a question in here? In the other thread folks were talking about lubing cases before resizing. I have watched a lot of videos. It seems everyone is cleaning the brass then resizing. On this site I thought someone said they resized before cleaning then the cleaning process removed the oil. Can it be done either way? Also what happens if oil gets into the case and you load it?
I lube with Hornady one shot spray. I'm positive some of it has been in the case during the loading process. I've never had an issue. I've even seen it advertised to be no big deal. Sometimes I lube and resize, tumble and then continue the loading process. Sometimes I tumble first then go through the whole process. Sometimes I don't tumble at all. Nowadays I have a universal decapping die and usually atleast pop the primers out before tumbling.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom