Yes. I wasn't a big fan due to how much pressure was needed to get a full and consistent trim. RCBS used to make a carbide cutter head, and it swapped right out with the cheap high speed steel one in the FA. It made it much better. Unfortunately, I haven't seen that carbide cutter head in stock in a long time.Has anybody had an experience using the frankford trimmer case prep center? I'll use it on calibers from 223 up to 300 prc
I've been loading for almost a decade and have never used a trimmer. While I haven't had any issues I'm just looking to start upgrading my equipment and thought I'd start with something I didn't have.Yes. I wasn't a big fan due to how much pressure was needed to get a full and consistent trim. RCBS used to make a carbide cutter head, and it swapped right out with the cheap high speed steel one in the FA. It made it much better. Unfortunately, I haven't seen that carbide cutter head in stock in a long time.
I finally upgraded to a Giraud several years back now and I'll never part with it lol.
Little crow makes a WTF2 trimmer with interchangeable chambers that are caliber specific. What I use. You buy one trimmer and cutter for $75 and caliber specific chambers for $25That's impressive you've gone this long without trimming.
The Little Crow trimmers work really well. They are caliber specific last I knew, but honestly it's a pain to swap change most trimmers to a different cartridge so having one always set is pretty nice. They use a carbide end mill for the cutter and it only needs a chamfer afterwards and you're good to go.
If you're not doing much at a time though, and you don't mind changing when switching back and forth from different cartridges, the FA will work fine. It's not a bad setup.
I agree with that. I will say for me, I make shoulder bump and case headspace as a top priority and I had no variance there. What I saw was I could vary the amount cut based on how hard I was pushing on some cases bs others. And it was the cutter head that was the problem. A carbide cutter head fixed that.I have two of the FA trimmers, because my first one started making a pretty obnoxious noise, so FA just sent me a brand new one without taking the old one back. That was 4 or 5 years ago, and both trimmers are still working great after many thousands of trims/chamfers/deburs/etc...
For bulk processing of brass, they are really hard to beat. They are very consistent at what they do. i.e. Trimming to a constant neck length. I think some folks that complain about variation in OAL with the FA trimmer, aren't taking into consideration that some of that variation is likely in their base to shoulder dimension from FL sizing sizing. After trimming, I can measure OAL, and it correlates directly to base to shoulder, which tells me that the neck length is spot on.
As mentioned, make sure to keep a sharp cutter on there.