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Post by thehartofthings on Apr 11, 2017 20:13:27 GMT -8
Been tinkering a bit with the 6x6.8, was having neck tension problems, sometimes chambering. Tried something different today. I don't know if it's uncommon or what but I thought I'd throw it out there for any feedback. I'm using the bushing technique in forming. When putting the tightest bushing in I was only getting maybe a 2 or 3 / 10ths of neck reduction at the tip. The bushing would have a little play even with the stem screwed all the way down. Today something proved me to stack the larger bushing on top of the smaller one as a means of reducing that play and bingo!!!! The neck fully sizes all the way to the shoulder junction. Is this common , this how it works , is anyone else doing this
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2017 2:26:44 GMT -8
Been tinkering a bit with the 6x6.8, was having neck tension problems, sometimes chambering. Tried something different today. I don't know if it's uncommon or what but I thought I'd throw it out there for any feedback. I'm using the bushing technique in forming. When putting the tightest bushing in I was only getting maybe a 2 or 3 / 10ths of neck reduction at the tip. The bushing would have a little play even with the stem screwed all the way down. Today something proved me to stack the larger bushing on top of the smaller one as a means of reducing that play and bingo!!!! The neck fully sizes all the way to the shoulder junction. Is this common , this how it works , is anyone else doing this I've not tried that. I have always been able to adjust the top of the die all the way down until it will jam the bushing. It sounds like you have a different method and it's working for you. Another plus is it's an easy way to keep track of your bushings.
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