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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Mandrel as last step?
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike Matteson" data-source="post: 2729434" data-attributes="member: 101791"><p>I'll go a long on that. Setting up and under sizing the neck the same on each case to start with. At least you would be some form of consistence. The brass is kind of the unknown on how it hold the bullet. So same lot of brass should help to be consistent. At the same time I will go back to cutting your case necks to a consistent thickness. There by the release would or should be the same all the way around. In my way of thinking. Some say it doesn't make any different. The long range shooter think not either. It would be hard to make me believe it doesn't. A thin pieces of metal moves far easier than a thicker pieces of metal or made to move at the time of releast. </p><p>The other is I haven't taken the time to set up, size and let the brass set for a day or so two, to see what the spring back is or going to be.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike Matteson, post: 2729434, member: 101791"] I'll go a long on that. Setting up and under sizing the neck the same on each case to start with. At least you would be some form of consistence. The brass is kind of the unknown on how it hold the bullet. So same lot of brass should help to be consistent. At the same time I will go back to cutting your case necks to a consistent thickness. There by the release would or should be the same all the way around. In my way of thinking. Some say it doesn't make any different. The long range shooter think not either. It would be hard to make me believe it doesn't. A thin pieces of metal moves far easier than a thicker pieces of metal or made to move at the time of releast. The other is I haven't taken the time to set up, size and let the brass set for a day or so two, to see what the spring back is or going to be. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Mandrel as last step?
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