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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Dies for tight chambers
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<blockquote data-quote="Kevin Thomas" data-source="post: 289046" data-attributes="member: 15748"><p>Lev-Hed,</p><p> </p><p>If I'm reading you right here, the problem may not be the die itself, but the shell holder. Redding makes a set of competition (I didn't name it!) shell holders that are a novel idea. It's a set of shellholders that are set in .001" increments of one another. The idea is that you can set the die with the lowest shell holder, and then adjust a thou at a time by simply replacing the shellholder with the next one in the set. If it's length from datum line that's the issue here, this may be your solution; that or grinding down a standard shell holder yourself. Personally, I'd go the Redding route (yes, I'm lazy), but it's your call. If it's actually a circumfrence dimensional issue, then we're back to the SB body die as a possible solution. </p><p> </p><p>Kevin</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kevin Thomas, post: 289046, member: 15748"] Lev-Hed, If I'm reading you right here, the problem may not be the die itself, but the shell holder. Redding makes a set of competition (I didn't name it!) shell holders that are a novel idea. It's a set of shellholders that are set in .001" increments of one another. The idea is that you can set the die with the lowest shell holder, and then adjust a thou at a time by simply replacing the shellholder with the next one in the set. If it's length from datum line that's the issue here, this may be your solution; that or grinding down a standard shell holder yourself. Personally, I'd go the Redding route (yes, I'm lazy), but it's your call. If it's actually a circumfrence dimensional issue, then we're back to the SB body die as a possible solution. Kevin [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Dies for tight chambers
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