hyena
Member
Dipping my toes in reloading after a 40 year hiatus. I dug out my old Rock Chucker press. I only reloaded 9mm when I was a young pup. Any way, I want to start with .38, then maybe add .45 ACP if I am enjoying reloading. I bought a 3 die set of Lee carbide dies locally, then later ordered the factory crimp die. It is due to arrive tomorrow, but I loaded my first 100 today..
I'm loading SMS red coated 158gr RNFP, with 4.5 grains of Unique. A friend who has been loading well over 50 years came over to assist. No questions about depriming, sizing, flaring, powder charge, etc. It was all straight forward. The directions on the crimp and seat die were a little murky, so here's how I set it up. I first got only the bullet seating depth right, to have one completed cartridge of the desired length. Then I backed out the knob for the bullet seat depth and adjusted the die down until I got the desired amount of crimp. Then put in my one completed cartridge and slowly lowered the bullet seating knob until it touched the bullet. So then ran off about 100 cartridges, with that one die both seating the bullets and roll crimping the case.
So why should I do that using two separate dies? I wouldn't care if I had a progressive press, but man, I had forgotten how many time you have to crank that handle to churn out 100 cartridges. I haven't been able to find a clear explanation of the advantage of using two dies to do what I did with one.
Also...on some of the completed reloads, it appeared there was a shaving of brass right where the bullet seated. By shaving, I mean it looked like a single yellow hair. So fine it just pulled or wiped right off. My friend said he had never experienced that. I wondered if I had flared the brass just a hair too much, but I thought I was careful to only flare each one enough to allow the bullet to sit on it steadily going into the seat/crimp die.
I had one failure, that might be due to using a single die to seat and crimp. I had one case slightly crunch up right below the bullet. Nothing dramatic, just enough it didn't want to drop in the chamber of my revolver, so I pulled the bullet, saved the powder, and threw away the brass.
I appreciate any help. Thanks in advance.
I'm loading SMS red coated 158gr RNFP, with 4.5 grains of Unique. A friend who has been loading well over 50 years came over to assist. No questions about depriming, sizing, flaring, powder charge, etc. It was all straight forward. The directions on the crimp and seat die were a little murky, so here's how I set it up. I first got only the bullet seating depth right, to have one completed cartridge of the desired length. Then I backed out the knob for the bullet seat depth and adjusted the die down until I got the desired amount of crimp. Then put in my one completed cartridge and slowly lowered the bullet seating knob until it touched the bullet. So then ran off about 100 cartridges, with that one die both seating the bullets and roll crimping the case.
So why should I do that using two separate dies? I wouldn't care if I had a progressive press, but man, I had forgotten how many time you have to crank that handle to churn out 100 cartridges. I haven't been able to find a clear explanation of the advantage of using two dies to do what I did with one.
Also...on some of the completed reloads, it appeared there was a shaving of brass right where the bullet seated. By shaving, I mean it looked like a single yellow hair. So fine it just pulled or wiped right off. My friend said he had never experienced that. I wondered if I had flared the brass just a hair too much, but I thought I was careful to only flare each one enough to allow the bullet to sit on it steadily going into the seat/crimp die.
I had one failure, that might be due to using a single die to seat and crimp. I had one case slightly crunch up right below the bullet. Nothing dramatic, just enough it didn't want to drop in the chamber of my revolver, so I pulled the bullet, saved the powder, and threw away the brass.
I appreciate any help. Thanks in advance.