kbm6893
Member
I am new to reloading and am getting ready to start throwing powder. I have resized and deprimed my brass, cleaned it, and expanded the case mouth to accept the bullet. I figured I'd get some practice in by seating some bullets without primer and powder. I figured I'd use the dummy rounds for training. Experience was NOT good.
First of all, I have 150 grain lead round nose bullets. They feel very soft to me. I will be using plated at the least from now on, if not jacketed.
I screwed up the first few big time. Seating die was WAY to low. Manual says to screw in it till it touches the shell holder, then back it out three full turns. Only problem is there is no numbers on the die to determine if I turned it 3 full times, and the first time was way low and it smashed the brass. I figured out to use the "E" in the "Lee" stamped on the die as a reference point. OK, lesson learned.
So i start seating bullets and adjust the depth with the knob on top. MAX OAL is 1.440. I'm getting very close, but the bullets look totally different, even though they are the same length. Here's a pic:
No, I did not trim my brass. I did chamfer them using the included tool. Nearly everything I have read says trimming pistol brass, especially revolver brass, is rarely necessary. They are a mix of .38 Special brands. I guess maybe I have to sort the brass and keep the sizes together. Didn't know there would be a difference in size of brass.
OK, the real disaster was the crimping. I am using a Lee Factory Crimp Die. The manual (and videos I have watched), say to screw the die in until it just touches the shell holder and back out the crimp knob all the way. Then put a shell into the holder and raise the ram into the die. The screw the crimp knob all the way "until you feel it touch the bullet", and then screw 1/2 turn more for light crimp, one full turn for medium. Only problem is I did not "feel" the die hit the bullet. I just kept going until it stopped, which was all the way down.
I don't mind trashing some brass and using the bullets, but up until now, everything was rolling along nice and smooth. Today has me second guessing whether I should have gotten into reloading at all, although I am not ready to give up.
First of all, I have 150 grain lead round nose bullets. They feel very soft to me. I will be using plated at the least from now on, if not jacketed.
I screwed up the first few big time. Seating die was WAY to low. Manual says to screw in it till it touches the shell holder, then back it out three full turns. Only problem is there is no numbers on the die to determine if I turned it 3 full times, and the first time was way low and it smashed the brass. I figured out to use the "E" in the "Lee" stamped on the die as a reference point. OK, lesson learned.
So i start seating bullets and adjust the depth with the knob on top. MAX OAL is 1.440. I'm getting very close, but the bullets look totally different, even though they are the same length. Here's a pic:

No, I did not trim my brass. I did chamfer them using the included tool. Nearly everything I have read says trimming pistol brass, especially revolver brass, is rarely necessary. They are a mix of .38 Special brands. I guess maybe I have to sort the brass and keep the sizes together. Didn't know there would be a difference in size of brass.
OK, the real disaster was the crimping. I am using a Lee Factory Crimp Die. The manual (and videos I have watched), say to screw the die in until it just touches the shell holder and back out the crimp knob all the way. Then put a shell into the holder and raise the ram into the die. The screw the crimp knob all the way "until you feel it touch the bullet", and then screw 1/2 turn more for light crimp, one full turn for medium. Only problem is I did not "feel" the die hit the bullet. I just kept going until it stopped, which was all the way down.
I don't mind trashing some brass and using the bullets, but up until now, everything was rolling along nice and smooth. Today has me second guessing whether I should have gotten into reloading at all, although I am not ready to give up.
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