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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Lee Collet Dies vs Redding S bushing dies
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<blockquote data-quote="abinok" data-source="post: 111668" data-attributes="member: 16"><p>Aside from the base expansion, the best thing the die can "tell you" about the brass being used is when you are work hardening the brass to the point it needs annealed. If it won't hold a bullet with the standard mandrel (about .0007"-.001" neck expansion on bullet seating) its time to either anneal, or can it.</p><p>Collet dies are awesome. Denouncers to their "engineering" seem to conviently leave out that where the different metals contact, there is NO wear, and no moving parts. Fit is what you would expect from a $20 die. Performance is far out of proportion to their cost. They are awesome!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="abinok, post: 111668, member: 16"] Aside from the base expansion, the best thing the die can "tell you" about the brass being used is when you are work hardening the brass to the point it needs annealed. If it won't hold a bullet with the standard mandrel (about .0007"-.001" neck expansion on bullet seating) its time to either anneal, or can it. Collet dies are awesome. Denouncers to their "engineering" seem to conviently leave out that where the different metals contact, there is NO wear, and no moving parts. Fit is what you would expect from a $20 die. Performance is far out of proportion to their cost. They are awesome! [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Lee Collet Dies vs Redding S bushing dies
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