Rez Exelon
AH enthusiast
One more update because I'm a sucker for punishment and don't sleep enough.
First test:
I took Piece Number 1 from the chart above and decided that I might as well get a little destructive in my testing. I happen to have a set of 458 Lott dies and I thought "Hey, I can just use the expander to fluff out the neck some, and then run it into the CH4D die and see what it sets it back to". Well, this might have been a great idea but I put it in too far and kind of crumpled the neck and belled out the neck too far to run it into the die. I managed to save the brass eventually by folding the bell back in a bit and then carefully working through a series of dies to straighten it out, but alas, that piece is off the shelf for firing in the future. I shoved a Woodleigh in it and it's going to be relegated to the "die setup" pile so I seated it to the cannelure, crimped it and off it went. It was kind of a solid idea, and I might try again later while being more careful, but I didn't science the results onto paper as I got focused on not entirely losing the piece of brass.
Second test:
After #1 didn't go so well, I got curious how measurements would play out with my current "I can get it to work" test method which is a bit safer, and figured I'd sacrifice Piece Number 2. Basically, this was developed per suggestion earlier in the thread, where I can take the brass, size it with the "real" die (which never does anything) and then size it again with a 416 Ruger die (Sidenote: Man I'm really glad I won the eBay auction for those a while back. They've been in a drawer for 2 years but I got them at a really stupid price LOL). The trick is to adjust the dies so they are only sizing the neck, which I did.
Doing that method, results in a neck with perfect tension to hold some boolits in it. So what do the actual measurements look like. Great question:
Off the shelf: OD: .438, ID: .416, T1: .010, T2: .012
Post Sizing: OD: .435, ID: .412, T1: .010, T2: .012 --- Basically it shrank the neck by .003
As a bonus test, I figured, what the heck, let's check it by shoving a bullet in it too. So I grabbed a Speer Hot Cor and made a second die setup reference cartridge. Obviously with the bullet in there the only one of the 4 measurements I can get is the OD which came in at .438.
Obviously all these measurements have some margin of error due to calipers and how hard I squeeze when measuring. Were I to make an educated guess, I'd probably say the ID on the post sizing line was really .413, and probably the OD with the bullet in there was .437. Mainly because I'd expect the shift of .003 to apply to both OD and ID measurements in the former, and because I'd expect that if the OD was the initial measured size with the bullet in there then I wouldn't have neck tension. But I may not be entirely solid in my thinking as it is getting past my bedtime.
First test:
I took Piece Number 1 from the chart above and decided that I might as well get a little destructive in my testing. I happen to have a set of 458 Lott dies and I thought "Hey, I can just use the expander to fluff out the neck some, and then run it into the CH4D die and see what it sets it back to". Well, this might have been a great idea but I put it in too far and kind of crumpled the neck and belled out the neck too far to run it into the die. I managed to save the brass eventually by folding the bell back in a bit and then carefully working through a series of dies to straighten it out, but alas, that piece is off the shelf for firing in the future. I shoved a Woodleigh in it and it's going to be relegated to the "die setup" pile so I seated it to the cannelure, crimped it and off it went. It was kind of a solid idea, and I might try again later while being more careful, but I didn't science the results onto paper as I got focused on not entirely losing the piece of brass.
Second test:
After #1 didn't go so well, I got curious how measurements would play out with my current "I can get it to work" test method which is a bit safer, and figured I'd sacrifice Piece Number 2. Basically, this was developed per suggestion earlier in the thread, where I can take the brass, size it with the "real" die (which never does anything) and then size it again with a 416 Ruger die (Sidenote: Man I'm really glad I won the eBay auction for those a while back. They've been in a drawer for 2 years but I got them at a really stupid price LOL). The trick is to adjust the dies so they are only sizing the neck, which I did.
Doing that method, results in a neck with perfect tension to hold some boolits in it. So what do the actual measurements look like. Great question:
Off the shelf: OD: .438, ID: .416, T1: .010, T2: .012
Post Sizing: OD: .435, ID: .412, T1: .010, T2: .012 --- Basically it shrank the neck by .003
As a bonus test, I figured, what the heck, let's check it by shoving a bullet in it too. So I grabbed a Speer Hot Cor and made a second die setup reference cartridge. Obviously with the bullet in there the only one of the 4 measurements I can get is the OD which came in at .438.
Obviously all these measurements have some margin of error due to calipers and how hard I squeeze when measuring. Were I to make an educated guess, I'd probably say the ID on the post sizing line was really .413, and probably the OD with the bullet in there was .437. Mainly because I'd expect the shift of .003 to apply to both OD and ID measurements in the former, and because I'd expect that if the OD was the initial measured size with the bullet in there then I wouldn't have neck tension. But I may not be entirely solid in my thinking as it is getting past my bedtime.