To Re-Load or Not???

I have some breathing issues, on oxygen most of the time so I refrain from pouring my own bullets, but I have about 250 435gr Maxi-Ball bullets for my 54 cal muzzleloader that I will never use, they would be perfect for someone to melt down and repour into something usable....What in North America would I need 435 gr bullet for, they came with my TC Hawkens and are probably the reason the previous owner got rid of it.
 
I have about 250 435gr Maxi-Ball bullets for my 54 cal muzzleloader that I will never use, they would be perfect for someone to melt down and repour into something usable.

Maybe you can work up a trade with a someone who casts bullets. You send him the lead, he sends you back a few projectiles you can use.

And back to the .223 reloading for the M&P 15-Sport...

The dang lee die instructions state to screw down the die until it touches the shell holder, back off the ram, then screw down the die 1/4 to 1/3 turn. I am having a dickens of a time getting an accurate setting using the breech lock / lock nut combo.

Decided to pick up the breech lock lock nut eliminator bushings.
 
The bushings makes it so easy to change the dies without having to readjust the settings but I still check the first try :D
 
This is getting a bit annoying. I'm following the die instructions. Screw down until said die touches shell holder, screw down another set amount.

I de-capped & resized. Put them on a gauge & trimmed. Debur/Champher. Charge case.

Now these are the things I'm not sure about because I have no clue:

First, when placing the projectile into the case mouth before seating it doesn't just fit in there like a flared pistol case. I have to be careful pushing the ram so the projectile doesn't fall off the case mouth.

Second, I've read that .223 doesn't need to be crimped because it's held in by neck tension. The bullet seating die instruction state that it crimps as it seats, but I can't tell. I put it through a Lee FCD per instructions, and have no frame of reference to judge what crimp (if any) was imparted.

I thought I'd compare it to a factory round. The crimp area is small, and it looks like a roll crimp not what I believe a collet crimp looks like.

grrr... I need to find a reloading class somewhere.
 
John,
My RCBS and Dillon resize dies both say to screw the die down until it touches the ram, then back it off up to half a turn. But once I got my headspace gauge I found that I needed to screw the die down just shy of touching the ram.

As for the mouth flaring, there really isn't any. Using boat tailed bullets makes it easier to set the bullet into the mouth. Otherwise you'll need to chamfer the inside of the mouth a bit so that a flat base bullet can be set.

With regards to crimp, I have my RCBS seating die backed off so that it's not even close to applying a crimp. With an empty case in the ram and fully raised, I screw the die down until I feel it hit the top of the case, then I back it off a turn. Once that's locked in place I adjust the seating plug for COL. I can push a loaded round against my benchtop and not have any bullet movement which I consider GTG.
 
Thanks for the help Bill. I appreciate it very much. I'm just a little on edge trying apply book knowledge. The "push a loaded round against my benchtop" test is a kernel of wisdom that would have taken me forever to discover on my own.

I have a Lyman .223 Headspace Gauge on order, due to arrive on Tuesday.
 
It gets better.
I wouldn't worry about the crimp right now, just get some loaded and shoot 'em. There will be plenty of time to learn as you go.
Like Bill said the case mouths don't flare, but I don't chamfer unless I trim. Just hold the bullet til the seating die catches it and seat it with love.
I know you have the portable press thingy (which I like BTW) and I don't know how you set the dies up on that. The 3 and 4 hole turret presses have some give in 'em so that's why you put the ram up and then give a 1/4 turn more.
I have an old Lee 3 die deluxe set that I used for loading bolt action .223 and that has no crimp in it.
I saw the dies you have are Lee, but not familiar with
the single dies, only the sets. I'm guessing that they're specifically for the press you have. Can you give a product number or link so I can see what you got?
Thanks.
 
John,
I can push a loaded round against my benchtop and not have any bullet movement which I consider GTG.

Again Bill, thanks. I tested the 10 rounds I made. 4 projectiles dropped back into the case.

I pulled all 10 rounds, and tried again from the beginning. I reset the dies. Tested the 10 new test rounds and they all passed the push test. Now they just have to pass the Lyman Headspace Gauge.


It gets better.
I wouldn't worry about the crimp right now, just get some loaded and shoot 'em. There will be plenty of time to learn as you go.

Will do. I'm trying to make the first 10 rounds good, so I have a decent baseline "feel".

Like Bill said the case mouths don't flare, but I don't chamfer unless I trim. Just hold the bullet til the seating die catches it and seat it with love.

Thank god I figured out that part right. :)

I know you have the portable press thingy (which I like BTW) and I don't know how you set the dies up on that. The 3 and 4 hole turret presses have some give in 'em so that's why you put the ram up and then give a 1/4 turn more.

I saw the dies you have are Lee, but not familiar with the single dies, only the sets. I'm guessing that they're specifically for the press you have. Can you give a product number or link so I can see what you got?

I have a Lee breech lock hand press, and I'm using Lee .223 Remington Pacesetter 3-Die kit.

Pacesetter Dies 223 Rem - Lee Precision

Thanks for the advice Storyteller!
 
That set comes with a separate crimping die so I kinda doubt the seating die gives much if any of a crimp, else why would you need a crimping die? My set has a FLR, neck size only (for bolt actions) and bullet seating die. Sounds like you're getting there. Good luck.
 
I have also asked Bill about crimping because some of the bullets I load go into a tubular magazine and in that case crimping is important. Due to the fact that the 223's go into a stacked mag, and I also use the same Lee Dies that you use I find that crimping is not that important, but I use to use the factory crimp die (FCD) but I talked to Bill and then tried it out and found out that I was wasting a lot of time. My Lee reloading manual talks about crimping as a way to keep the chamber pressure even but I am finding that it is not as necessary. John as you are learning it is a learning experience but it is worth it. Keep trying buddy, glad you stepped into it. Oh and by the way it doesn't cling to your shoes!!!! LOL :D
 
Has anyone tried the Hornaday bullet puller that goes in your press? I just bought one, I am trying to remove the factory bullet from a LC m855 round a friend wants to have a guy with a mini lathe drill the center of a .45 install the m855 tip in the 45 round and fire it.

Never really cared for the "puller in the press" idea. I use and have great luck with a kinetic bullet puller. It's a hollow "plastic" hammer that one end screws off and has a incert the size of what ever cal you want to pull. It tightens around the rim as you screw the bullet in and you slam the "hammer" end down on a hard surface to dislodge the bullet (maybe two good hits). Bullet comes out,powder stays inside. Unscrew and dump the powder and bullet out. Was a bit scary first time I saw one. Been usuing one for almost 40 years and no problems. Love it.
 
I was taught many years ago not to tumble after decapping. Said it would enlarge the primer pockets. I see that many of you are doing it though. Wondering if anyone else has heard this and if any of you who are doing it have seen any problems with it?

Same here. I do it before I deprime. At the worst I might hear a little crunch if a walnut piece gets in the primer hole when depriming. Don't know about enlarging primer pockets,but I did have walnut pieces get in the primer pockets and switched to doing it before I deprime and size.
 
I broke my reloading cherry on .38 Special & .357 Mag. My only intent in reloading was to escape the ridiculously high price of factory .357 Mag. Well now I have the basic low-volume equipment, might as well save on .45 ACP too. Oh look, 9mm went up to $14 per 50 factory rounds. Added 9mm dies. I got tired of readjusting dies between .38 & .357, so I bought another die set to dedicate to .357. Now I broke my rifle caliber reloading cherry.

IMO, the reloading addiction is worse than the firearms addiction. I'm no longer constrained by the cost of factory ammo, and free to explore the possibility of owning calibers I wouldn't previously consider.

There's also the quasi-mad scientist aspect of reloading that is appealing.

I'm to the point of hateing fine tuning reloading dies everytime I switch loads and just getting another press. I reload 45 ACP and (finger pinching) 9mm,223...
 
I'm to the point of hateing fine tuning reloading dies everytime I switch loads and just getting another press. I reload 45 ACP and (finger pinching) 9mm,223...


That's why I opted for a loadmaster (5 die stations) with FCD - with 9 I cna change bullets and only change the seat die, no tools needed. Changing powder isn't too bad.
To change to 38 is under 5 minutes and the dies don't need changed. So far only shooting lead but that's 148DWC and 158RN - only change is the seating die.

I want to load 357 but have to adjust dies...so i'm waiting till I feel like getting another plate and dies that can be left for 357.

I got a challenger breechlock single stage press and then the lee plate mount deal so I can swap out presses. I plan to be reloading 30-06 in a week or so. So I should be able to setup 30-06 dies and and just go at it and changing to 30-30 or 308 should be quick and easy.

Call it efficiency or just being lazy, your choice.
 
I have also asked Bill about crimping because some of the bullets I load go into a tubular magazine and in that case crimping is important. Due to the fact that the 223's go into a stacked mag, and I also use the same Lee Dies that you use I find that crimping is not that important, but I use to use the factory crimp die (FCD) but I talked to Bill and then tried it out and found out that I was wasting a lot of time. My Lee reloading manual talks about crimping as a way to keep the chamber pressure even but I am finding that it is not as necessary. John as you are learning it is a learning experience but it is worth it. Keep trying buddy, glad you stepped into it. Oh and by the way it doesn't cling to your shoes!!!! LOL :D

I'm not 100% sure,but I think my older than dirt RCBS 223 dies had a slight crimp at the end of the bullet seating. I know my RCBS 45 dies do and my 9mm.

Getting back into reloading again... Are there 5.56 reloading dies ??? That cound have been what saved my tail shooting 5.56 in my Mini 14 years ago. It was only shot once for the brass and resized and loaded for 223.
 
I noticed when I increased to a heavier crimp my group significantly decreased with the same amount of powder used so by increasing the crimp I save money by using less powder for a hotter round.

there is a great video series on Utube on reloading .223 you may want to watch

www.youtube.com/watch?v=THOL_S7Hngs&feature=related , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgpZXCDWneg&feature=relmfu , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQGTFkklSTk&feature=related ,http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmeLD8BFm-w&feature=related

The differences between the 223 and the 5.56 is the case from what I have read the case walls are thicker ( same amount of powder in smaller space = higher pressure) and the neck a little longer.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iE7E7O4vTM&feature=related
 
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I'm to the point of hateing fine tuning reloading dies everytime I switch loads and just getting another press. I reload 45 ACP and (finger pinching) 9mm,223...

I use the Lee 3 hole press and set up different turrets for different calibers. Also recently bought a Lee 4 hole press for peanuts I found in the classifieds. Using that for .223 only now since I load and shoot it more than anything else.
 
I just watched the first couple videos in GMC's post. I see that at some point I'll need a primer pocket swager to process military primer pocket crimped brass.

I'm still completely satisfied with the pace & output I achieve with my meager hand press. It fulfills my reloading needs & is forcing me to pay attention to everything.

When the time comes where I'll need to produce a higher volume of ammo, I hope I've built up enough base knowledge to step up to a nice progressive press. :)
 
I made a adapter for my cordless drill that works great I took a old drill bit extension and cut it off about 4 inches from the end, removed the bottom set screw and took the lee chamfer tool drilled a hole in the correct height for the set screw and using a bolt bolted the chamfer tool in the extension. works really good :D

sorry I havent been around been fighting a gout attack. I think I would rather have a root canal w/o anesthesia than gout.
 
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