Seating Die

I used Redding dies for years for the same reasons as Dok.

2 years ago I switched to Wilson Chamber dies. For me the portability of an arbor press was the reason. Being able to adjust seating depth at the range is priceless.

Second the ability to "feel" seating pressure has many benefits

Another thing I like about it is once I figured out a rhythm my loading process became very efficient.

My smith doesn't charge me to chamber the dies either. I get a perfectly concentric die that produces minimal runout
 
I used Redding dies for years for the same reasons as Dok.

2 years ago I switched to Wilson Chamber dies. For me the portability of an arbor press was the reason. Being able to adjust seating depth at the range is priceless.

Second the ability to "feel" seating pressure has many benefits

Another thing I like about it is once I figured out a rhythm my loading process became very efficient.

My smith doesn't charge me to chamber the dies either. I get a perfectly concentric die that produces minimal runout

I am looking to tighten groups up and have never used a micro or competition seating die. I'm loading varmint and hunting loads and they get the job done, but there's always a way to improve so I'm exploring the use of a controlled seating die.
Thank you....
james
 
I used Redding dies for years for the same reasons as Dok.

2 years ago I switched to Wilson Chamber dies. For me the portability of an arbor press was the reason. Being able to adjust seating depth at the range is priceless.

Second the ability to "feel" seating pressure has many benefits

Another thing I like about it is once I figured out a rhythm my loading process became very efficient.

My smith doesn't charge me to chamber the dies either. I get a perfectly concentric die that produces minimal runout
if you like arbor press and wilson in line try this arbor press you can see what you are doing with the dial. https://lewilson.com/k-m-precision-...ard-force-measurement-ram-and-dial-indicator/
 
I don't anneal every time. Every third firing. And I have been experimenting using an expander for neck tension recently. You right, my neck tension is more consistent.

Buttons are the first thing to hit the trash when I buy a die

try annealing EVERY TIME/... AND A NECK EXPANDER vs bushings and pulling buttons. it works wonders on uniform neck tension.
 
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