"Even the Redding die sets the shoulder back 0.012" "
Wow, that's a lot.
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"Even the Redding die sets the shoulder back 0.012" "
Wow, that's a lot.
The T3 chambers are pretty tight and a good match for the Lapua brass so it is the US specs that are at fault. The chambers for the M77 and M38 are longer so the shorter Lyman die set the shoulders on these back 0.022"! That's about a third of the firing pin protrusion.
GPM.
SAFA 95 were are you based in Hawkesbay?
@Hmans - Havelock North is home, but travel a fair bit
@TeRei yip, it's cost a bit more than expected initially, but satisfaction for OCD / Data-nerd is worth it so far... am thankful (very thankful) for some quality quidance from a komatua. :-)
Have followed @Oldbloke list, and shopped around for quality components where it matters, and relied on DIY kiwi no-8 wire tools where it hasn't mattered too much (ie: home-made depromer, 4x2 for a loading block, deburrer/chamber tool DIY, etc)... has been good fun. Satisfaction (now that baseline data is showing a picture), is achieving some decent load/accuracy with projectiles that are 20+grain more than the rifles prefered factory ammo. Next "game" is replicating the factory load that the rifle likes.
@safa95
You did some DIY. Goodonya.
Did you buy new or used?
What do you think was the total cost?
More than I would have expected. But some gear like presses and scales can be expensive new.