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Originally Posted by
ireload2
In the years since the American Rifleman article there have been tens of thousands of rounds fired in all sorts of rifles with all sorts of brass.
The only bananas that were found came out of a Lee-Enfield brand banana maker.
No other brands of banana makers have be found. Even the tilting bolt Hakim does not produce bananas in spite of the fact that it's bolt must tilt up and down to lock and unlock.
The same brass that some attribute the problem to can be reformed to other round such as the 6.5X53R Dutch Mannlicher and reloaded many times without case head separations or bananas resulting.
That maybe the case. History shows that American made brass is the problem in Lee- Enfield Rifles
even those made in the USA
. This thread accepts the problem and shows how to deal with it. These battle rifles are not benchrest machines though it took the world along time to equal or surpass there qualities on the range.
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Thank You to Bindi2 For This Useful Post:
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09-29-2010 09:00 PM
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I recently had my primary shooting rifle No4mk2 stop shooting well. It was setup by AJP and always shot great but now the bore is pretty worn, and it will pass a .303 gauge, and I thought I'd retire it. So I started using a new No4mk2, that didn't shoot well with the old load. I spoke to a guy at my club who put me onto these hornady.312dia. 174gn HPBT Matchkings that I thought might be just the ticket for my worn rifle, so I decided to do some load development on the new and the worn rifle.
I did this yesterday. and I used the" ladder method",components were Remington brass, CCI 250 magnum primers, AR2208, and Hornady .3105 174gn FMJ's for the new rifle and Hornady .312 174gn HPBT MK's for the worn one.OAL was 3.05" for both as this is my determined safe all round length to fit in any No4or SMLE mag.
I tend to err to lighter loads, but this test showed me 3 distinct clusters in both rifles, with the smallest cluster of both being the hottest end of the scale.
The smallest clusters of 7 odd consecutive rounds from each rifle was about 1" at 100m, which is just fine.
So I've now got good new loads for these rifles, and next week I'll repeat the test with AR2209 to see how that goes, as it fills the case a bit better, and I'm told it's more ideal.
Anyway if you havn't used the ladder method of load development I'd suggest looking it up and trying it as it works great and saves alot of time and rounds.
BTW both rifles had no problem approaching and at maximum loads.
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All of this technical discussion is fascinating and going right over my head (I might understand it one day), so I will ask a question that I might have a chance of understanding the resulting answers - anyone have any experience of using the RCBS Universal Hand Priming Tool for repriming British
.303 cases? Anyone have a particular priming setup they prefer?
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I used a Lee hand priming tool for years in conjunction with a single stage press no problems just too slow for the number of reloads i do. Now use a Dillon progressive (rifles) or Hornady projector ( pistol). If i use a single stage press i always use the Lee tool ( have all the case holders) in preferrence to the press pimer tool,easier,quicker,safer,no individual handling of primers.
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Contributing Member
Lee Auto Prime Hand Priming Tool is outstanding - and at at $12.95 it is very cheap.
Lee Auto Prime Hand Priming Tool - MidwayUSA
You need to buy a shell holder, see
Lee Auto Prime Hand Priming Tool Shellholder Package of 11 - MidwayUSA
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ok spinecracker,
I´m indeed using the RCBS device, but what do you want to know ? Insert the right shellholder and rod and there you go.
I prefer RCBS over the mentioned lee, because it looks more rigid. I´ve seen many cracked lees but no RCBS handprimers.
But that´s just my point of view.
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Legacy Member
bellerophon, I just wanted people's opinions regarding ease of use, any issues with using the RCBS primer, etc - I bought one yesterday, tried it out, and liked it immediately. Assuming that I am not too hamfisted, I should be good to start reloading this week
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yeah, I think it´s a good buy ! 
btw S&B cases have too small priming holes, wouldn´t bother with them.
I have PPU from Serbia and winchester is again working best, for me at least.