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Thread: 303 Resizing for Rapid Fire

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  1. #11
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    What about the Redding body die? Has anyone tried them?

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  3. #12
    Banned Edward Horton's Avatar
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    Mr. Sukey

    Sorry I can’t find the company I bought my shims from but to be truthful I should have bought from the company below as they have a better reputation for quality.

    Headspace Control Shims (TM) the EXACT Headspace Sizing Solution!
    Headspace Control Shims (TM) the EXACT Headspace Sizing Solution!

    To order you must send a check or money order for $25.00 price includes shipping to
    Eclipse Engineering & Design
    P.O. Box 12525
    Everett, WA 98206
    Phone 425-338-9895

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  5. #13
    Banned Edward Horton's Avatar
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    MJ1

    I was very lucky and worked with a machinist and bench rest shooter at the military overhaul depot I worked at for 34 years, he taught me a lot just on reloading for utmost accuracy.

    On a full length resizing die (or any die) you adjust the die for proper contact with the shell holder, and then press a lubed case into the die to center the die and take the slop out of the die threads and the press, at this point you tighten the lock ring and lock it in place with the set screw. (the die is now perfectly centered in the press and with the shell holder)

    Next with the lock nut on the ball expander spindle “loose” you lower the press arm until the ball expander just enters the neck of the case, let the press arm hang free and then tighten the lock nut on the spindle.

    This centers the expander ball and keeps you from pulling the necks off center and out of alignment with the bore (reduces bullet run out misalignment).

    Now with the lock ring locked to the die you then place the shims under the lock ring to raise the die and then start removing shims until a round will chamber with out forcing the bolt closed, now remove .001 to .002 for a perfect fit to the chamber.

    NOTE: the average rimless case like the .308 is made .002 shorter than minimum headspace to ensure the cartridge will fit and chamber, in a rapid fire event you will need to do this or have approximately .002 slop. If you are really into it you could have custom FL dies made for minimum resizing (.001 side clearance and .001 headspace clearance)
    Last edited by Edward Horton; 03-25-2009 at 11:16 PM.

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    Read this very carefully below about partial full length resizing, it is the most accurate method of resizing, the problem is finding good quality .303 cases that can withstand this like Greek HXP cases or Privi cases.

    Also please note minimum headspace is .064 for the .303 and the average American rim thickness is .059 - .058 and you are starting off with .005 to .006 head gap clearance which will cause thinning in the web area with an American made .303 case because of their smaller base diameter.
    (tighter headspace settings save wear and tear on your brass)

    From: bartbob@aol.com (Bartbob)
    Newsgroups: rec.guns
    Subject: Re: Bottleneck Cases - Seating and headspace
    Date: 11 Jan 1996 09:34:11 -0500

    Your questions about reloading the .308 Winchester are good.

    Headspace for the .308 Winchester, as well as other rimless,
    bottleneck cases, is measured from the closed bolt's face to
    a datum point on the shoulder. This datum point for the
    .308 Win. is .400-inch. Minimum .308 Win. chamber headspace
    is 1.630-inch. Maximum is about 1.650-inch. New cases
    typically measure about 1.628-inch from case head to the
    shoulder's datum point so they will easily fit in minimum-
    headspace chambers, yet not stretch in firing enough to
    cause head-separation problems when fired in a maximum-
    headspace chamber. New cases typically end up with a fired-
    case headspace dimension of about .001-inch shorter than the
    chamber's actual headspace.

    Headspace is measured with steel gages precision ground to
    specific dimensions. They are put in the rifle's chamber,
    then the bolt is gently closed. If the chamber is too short
    and a minimum gage is used, the bolt won't fully close; the
    chamber must be lengthened with a reamer to fix the problem
    as new cases may not allow the bolt to be closed. If the
    chamber headspace is between the minimum and maximum limits,
    then the minimum gage will let the bolt easily close. If a
    maximum gage is put in the chamber, the bolt should not be
    able to close which verifies the chamber headspace is within
    manufacturing limits for safe use with new cases. But if
    the bolt closes on a maximum gage, chamber headspace is too
    long and new cases may rupture if fired in such a chamber.
    Minimum gages are called "go" gages, maximum gages are
    called "no-go" gages based on the idea that a the bolt
    should "go" closed on a go-gage and "no-go" closed on a
    no-go gage.

    Bottleneck sized- or new-case headspace can be measured with
    a gage such as the RCBS Precision Mic. A case is put head-
    down in the gage, then a micrometer thimble is screwed on
    and tightened until it stops against the shoulder. The gage
    is read in thousandths of an inch. Loaded rounds can also
    be measured with such gages.

    Here's what was learned back in the 1960s about sizing
    cases. It applies to the .308 as well as other rounds of
    similar size. Tests were conducted with super-accurate
    .308 Win. match rifles. Chamber headspace was 1.630-inch,
    or minimum. Rifles were held in an unrestricted machine
    rest. An unrestricted machine rest clamps the rifle's
    forend and butt much like it would be held by someone. On
    firing, it moves with the same resistance for each shot.
    It slides on three steel rods riding in V-blocks and moves
    about 3 inches when fired. The upper cradle is moved back
    forward against a stop after each shot and repositions the
    rifle exactly the same for each shot. Such machine rests
    eliminates all human variables in holding and are commonly
    used by bullet making companies and military arsenals for
    accuracy testing. Sometimes only a barreled action is
    clamped in the rest; pictures of such machine rests are
    shown in Sierra's reloading manual. The US Olympic Shooting
    Team uses similar ones for testing .22 rimfire match rifles
    and ammunition as they know humans can't test them as well
    as the rest can.

    Such tests are much, much better than shooting a highpowered
    rifle from a bench because of one important, but little
    known reason. The more recoil a rifle has, the more very,
    very slight changes in how it's held effect how it moves as
    the bullet goes down the barrel; very small changes cause
    the barrel axis to be different for each shot as the bullet
    leaves. Rifles used in 100 to 300 yard benchrest matches
    shoot mild cartridges with small powder charges and light
    bullets which are shot in virtually free-recoil conditions
    unimpeded by differences in holding which is near machine
    rest conditions. When held firmly like rifles shooting
    larger, more powerful cartridges have to be, they typically
    shoot much larger groups than the sub 1/4th-MOA ones they
    are famous for. Rifles tested in machine rests typically
    have groups with smaller spreads between largest and
    smallest ones than when conventionally benchrested. What
    this means is that most highpowered rifles actually shoot
    better than conventional benchrest techniques show.

    The .308 rifles fired in a machine rest would shoot about
    1/2-MOA test groups with cases sized correctly for best
    accuracy. Note that twenty or more shots were fired for
    each group. When hand-held and shouldered from a typical
    benchrest with the rifle's forend and stock toe on sand
    bags, the groups would be in the 1 MOA range. Here's a
    summary of what was learned from these tests.

    When a full-length sizing die was set in the reloading press
    as instructions said, sized cases had a head-to-shoulder
    headspace typically shorter than a new case. When fired,
    these cases produced test groups about 1.5-MOA. Note that
    the die was set in the press such that its bottom just
    touched the shellholder as the ram was at the top of its
    movement. This caused the case shoulder to be set back so
    the sized-case headspace dimension was typically shorter
    than that of a new case. Such instructions supplied with
    reloading presses and dies are required for two reasons
    regarding chambers with minimum headspace dimensions. First,
    the great variety of chamber sizes for a given cartridge
    vary quite a bit and the manufacturer wants to be sure sized
    cases will chamber properly. Second, the amount of case
    lube applied causes sized-case headspace to vary several
    thousandths of an inch; lightly lubed cases will have a
    longer headspace and the manufacturer wants to be sure cases
    so sized will fit in minimum headspace chambers. Cases so
    sized could be reloaded about 10 times before their head
    separation became imminent.

    Fired cases partially sized in a full-length sizing die
    with about three-fourths of the neck sized produced test
    groups about 1.5-MOA groups. Cases so sized had their
    body diameter's reduced a couple of thousandths of an inch
    which moved the shoulder forward several thousandths of an
    inch. These partially-sized cases were actually longer in
    head-to-shoulder datum point dimension than the chamber's
    headspace dimension. A slight binding was noted as the
    rounds were chambered. Case life of these cases was about
    20 to 30 reloads.

    Fired cases that were neck-only sized in dies that didn't
    have their body diameters reduced but their necks were sized
    down would shoot groups about 1-MOA groups. Subsequent
    firings of the same case resulted in its shoulder moving
    forward enough to cause very slight binding as the bolt was
    closed and groups opened up about 1/4th MOA with such cases.
    About 30 to 40 reloads per case was possible.

    New, never fired cases produced test groups about 3/4ths-MOA
    even with all their irregularities from manufacturing.

    The smallest test groups came from cases full-length sized
    such as the shoulder was not set back from it fired
    position. Sized-case headspace was the same as, or not more
    than .001-inch shorter than fired-case headspace. Test
    groups were about 1/2 MOA. And cases could be reloaded
    20 to 30 times.

    This well explains why most folks get better accuracy with
    partial-sized cases using full-length sizing dies than by
    following press/die instructions for full-length sizing. It
    also explains why they get better accuracy with neck-only
    sized cases compared to conventional full-length sizing with
    the die set according to supplied instructions.

    It should be mentioned that the machine-rest tests were made
    at 600 yards. Had the tests been done at 100 yards, the
    smallest groups would have been about 2/10ths-MOA and the
    largest ones about 3/4ths-MOA. In one test, 40 consecutive
    shots were fired into just under 2 inches at 600 yards. To
    do that well, the group at 100 yards would have to be about
    1/10th MOA.

    By using a sized-case headspace gage like the RCBS Precision
    Mic, you can set a full-length sizing die in a press such
    that it sizes the cases just enough to set the shoulder back
    no more than .001-inch. You'll probably get best accuracy
    this way as well as excellent case life.
    Last edited by Edward Horton; 03-25-2009 at 11:15 PM.

  7. #15
    Legacy Member MJ1's Avatar
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    I had to read that three times. Next week I will start playing aroun with some of the information. When I was in school in '66 there was not time to go into things in this depth.

    Cheers
    ..MJ..

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