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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Forster CoAx press
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<blockquote data-quote="rcoody" data-source="post: 1166388" data-attributes="member: 91090"><p>I use a co-ax. buy the lock rings by the dozen. They are cheap. Change out the lock rings on my Sinclair dies first thing. Same way with my lee decapping dies. Most of my dies are forster and they come with them.</p><p> </p><p>The Sinclair dies come with a lock ring and set screw. the set screw protrudes a little bit. It can bind up in the slot the lock ring fits into. When that happens then the self centering part of the design for front and back is defeated. As long as you keep the set screw facing forward in the slot this won't happen but as that die turns in the slot the setscrew binds. I have enough distractions at the loading bench and I forget to watch for it. Now I just change them out.</p><p> </p><p>I also don't like driving a setscrew into the threads of the die. Bound to bugger them up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rcoody, post: 1166388, member: 91090"] I use a co-ax. buy the lock rings by the dozen. They are cheap. Change out the lock rings on my Sinclair dies first thing. Same way with my lee decapping dies. Most of my dies are forster and they come with them. The Sinclair dies come with a lock ring and set screw. the set screw protrudes a little bit. It can bind up in the slot the lock ring fits into. When that happens then the self centering part of the design for front and back is defeated. As long as you keep the set screw facing forward in the slot this won't happen but as that die turns in the slot the setscrew binds. I have enough distractions at the loading bench and I forget to watch for it. Now I just change them out. I also don't like driving a setscrew into the threads of the die. Bound to bugger them up. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Forster CoAx press
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