flat top
Member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2008
- Messages
- 491
- Reaction score
- 9
Yes we have snow here...beautiful! Was out in the woods a bit yesterday...a winter wonderland! I love being in the woods when it snows!!!
Excellent on the chrono, and, shoot some groups while you are at it. Because of the nature of the heavy crimp you may have to adjust your loads a bit to get the results that we have experienced. I am assuming that you are starting this process with one load....for comparison purposes.....one set of cartidges for normal crimp and another set up with the heavy crimp? Keep in mind that the heavy crimp because of its increased pull factor and compression yield WILL raise pressures a bit, so make sure that your loads are not max!!! Anyway, once you shoot the heavy crimp and get some data, then work a load up with only the heavy crimp, and I think you will see that it will outperform the lesser crimp worked up in the same manner. That has been our experience.
SC; The RCBS 44 Mag dies have been on my loading bench long before there was a Lee die to buy............The Lee Carbide Factory Crimp die came much later, as did most of Lee's other products.
I have tried to offer up a fix for a problem that "some" folks on this forum may have been experiencing. The solution works, for those that care to try it. As I said before, if the standard Lee seating die will apply this heavy crimp, thats great, but, dont demean the time and effort that I spent to solve a problem with the Lee Carbide Factory Crimp Die, and try to help out others who may have been experiencing that particular problem. I belong to a few other forums that are made up of "serious" shooter/reloader/hunters, and I never see "anybody" ridiculed or made fun of or about, for thier ideas. A lot of folks on here invest time, effort and money to educate and inform the forum members, and I think its about time that everybody realizes that, and cuts some slack to those of us that put forth the effort.
Excellent on the chrono, and, shoot some groups while you are at it. Because of the nature of the heavy crimp you may have to adjust your loads a bit to get the results that we have experienced. I am assuming that you are starting this process with one load....for comparison purposes.....one set of cartidges for normal crimp and another set up with the heavy crimp? Keep in mind that the heavy crimp because of its increased pull factor and compression yield WILL raise pressures a bit, so make sure that your loads are not max!!! Anyway, once you shoot the heavy crimp and get some data, then work a load up with only the heavy crimp, and I think you will see that it will outperform the lesser crimp worked up in the same manner. That has been our experience.
SC; The RCBS 44 Mag dies have been on my loading bench long before there was a Lee die to buy............The Lee Carbide Factory Crimp die came much later, as did most of Lee's other products.
I have tried to offer up a fix for a problem that "some" folks on this forum may have been experiencing. The solution works, for those that care to try it. As I said before, if the standard Lee seating die will apply this heavy crimp, thats great, but, dont demean the time and effort that I spent to solve a problem with the Lee Carbide Factory Crimp Die, and try to help out others who may have been experiencing that particular problem. I belong to a few other forums that are made up of "serious" shooter/reloader/hunters, and I never see "anybody" ridiculed or made fun of or about, for thier ideas. A lot of folks on here invest time, effort and money to educate and inform the forum members, and I think its about time that everybody realizes that, and cuts some slack to those of us that put forth the effort.
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