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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
What do you see with virgin vs. once fired.
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<blockquote data-quote="MagnumManiac" data-source="post: 2859316" data-attributes="member: 10755"><p>I doubt very much that a comp shooter opens a new bag/box of brass, does nothing to that brass, and loads them up and goes shooting for record. I don't even do that for my hunting rifles. All brass gets neck sized, to my specs, then run through the mandrel. I chamfer case mouths, but I do not trim new brass, it all grows at different rates, so I fire it once and then check. If I deem it necessary, which is rare, I will skim cut new brass for a .001" cut just to see where it's at, but not on a production rifle, rarely any point doing so.</p><p>My new brass that will be formed into an improved chamber all gets annealed first before any steps in sizing are done.</p><p>I have learnt this is the most efficient way.</p><p></p><p>Cheers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MagnumManiac, post: 2859316, member: 10755"] I doubt very much that a comp shooter opens a new bag/box of brass, does nothing to that brass, and loads them up and goes shooting for record. I don’t even do that for my hunting rifles. All brass gets neck sized, to my specs, then run through the mandrel. I chamfer case mouths, but I do not trim new brass, it all grows at different rates, so I fire it once and then check. If I deem it necessary, which is rare, I will skim cut new brass for a .001” cut just to see where it’s at, but not on a production rifle, rarely any point doing so. My new brass that will be formed into an improved chamber all gets annealed first before any steps in sizing are done. I have learnt this is the most efficient way. Cheers. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
What do you see with virgin vs. once fired.
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