"think through the basics"...Hummm, lets see...
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After dealing with Whidden, Forster and Hornady the last few years, Ive figured it out. Its not that they don't know, it about keeping things on the fat side to keep from cracking dies. Ive had to fight with them to make my Sherman dies the way I want them. Hornady will at least do that for me now, and occasionally we crack one. There is a very fine line between enough sizing and cracking the die. The reason most shelf dies, like Hornady have clickers after three firings is they look at it as good enough because the brass is toast after three firings anyway. Ive had these discussions with all of them. I reminded them that we aren't dealing with throw away brass at 2.00+ apiece and its after a few firings where the sizing becomes a problem because the case head gets harder and doesn't spring back, so you need a little more sizing than necessary the first 2 or 3 loads, but if its right, you can still size after twenty firings.If it was so basic how did Hornandy screw up the PRC dimensions?
Ask Alex Wheeler how " basic" reamer designs are.
Oh there is basic, but if thats all you care about.
Mike, I know you are advanced in your thinking and planning, but for those that are not, you take this drawing, make measurments on brand new brass, there is a LOT of design that still needs to be taken into account. If you have a reamer made off of exact brass dimensions, your reamer will be worthless. The print with the exact dimensions is the road map for you to now ADD clearances you want. Knowing what dimensions your dies size to is of great importance, instead of discovering a major flaw AFTER THE FACT!I just measure new brass & fill out a blank reamer print.
I see no reason to send a reamer maker anything other than a reamer print (through email).
Like this:
View attachment 475122
For reference you can google image reamer drawings for various cartridges.
Such big words. You still didn't answer my question, did you just fill out a blank reamer print your first time?I suspect that you're dumping money & time into abstracts, and then reacting to results of these abstracts as though they're causes..
Like chaos = rocket science
I wouldnt trust P.T @ G with anything anymore.Pacific Tool & Guage used to do this type of work. I'm not sure what they are offering today, but about 10 years ago, I sent them three brass from an 'ackley-ized' chambering in .277 caliber (based off the 338 Lapua case) and told them I wanted the same thing in .338 caliber. I got a call a week later with some additional questions and then received the reamer along with a blueprint about a month after that. I sent a copy of the print to Whidden and they made me some custom dies. Not that hard. But I have no idea what these companies are doing today.
After dealing with Whidden, Forster and Hornady the last few years, Ive figured it out. Its not that they don't know, it about keeping things on the fat side to keep from cracking dies. Ive had to fight with them to make my Sherman dies the way I want them. Hornady will at least do that for me now, and occasionally we crack one. There is a very fine line between enough sizing and cracking the die. The reason most shelf dies, like Hornady have clickers after three firings is they look at it as good enough because the brass is toast after three firings anyway. Ive had these discussions with all of them. I reminded them that we aren't dealing with throw away brass at 2.00+ apiece and its after a few firings where the sizing becomes a problem because the case head gets harder and doesn't spring back, so you need a little more sizing than necessary the first 2 or 3 loads, but if its right, you can still size after twenty firings.
My 30 Sherman Magnum, for example only sizes an extra .0005-.001" and we have no clickers vs the PRC..
That is 100% true.The old school way of thinking is tight everything.....now we know a little clearance in the right areas make a world of difference.
I learned about SAAMI tolerances and wildcats of the time in a reloading class. This was 1975, I was 12.Such big words. You still didn't answer my question, did you just fill out a blank reamer print your first time?
Go over to accurateshooter and convince some of those guys its just " Basic". Ask Alex how many BRA and Dasher reamers he has and if there's a difference in them or there all just " Basic".
Everbody i know in LR BR is gotten away from tight necks, tight brass dimensions etc.I learned about SAAMI tolerances and wildcats of the time in a reloading class. This was 1975, I was 12.
But I'm sure nothing in reloading has advanced beyond basic in over 100yrs.
Same kind of people, with their same kind of folklore, and their same bad choices.
Give me one technical basis for more clearance being in your answers.
Not a so & so says it, or had a problem or won with it, but your actual understanding of what goes on with clearances and gun design.