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View Full Version : Need a new seating die I think....



bullpen7979
10-09-2016, 07:51 PM
Getting the .308 casting thing hashed out. I was trying to use my seating die to, uh, seat the projectiles and I realized that my .311-.312 powder coated slugs were slightly too fat to fit thru the body of the die, and the tightness of the body was acting as the seating rod, thus pushing the slugs too far down.

So, similar to how I needed a decapping pin for the 303 british, do I now need to get a 303 british seating die?

I no longer live next to my machinist neighbor guy......, not sure what i would use to bore out the center. Seems better to get another die since I still want to load the copper Amax's once in a while.

So, 303 British? or slightly larger?

OS OK
10-09-2016, 08:06 PM
Can't you resize after PC'ing to .310"? Using a Lee push through sizer? Won't that be fat enough?

mdi
10-09-2016, 09:56 PM
Or you could "polish" a couple thousandths outta the ID of the seater die body?

Don Fischer
10-10-2016, 10:26 AM
I would not fool with the plug in the seating die. The bottom edge is what seat's the bullet and it should measure the same as the lead in your rifle's throat. You polish it out and bullet's seated to the same OLL at the ogive will suddenly start being pushed into the lands.

mdi
10-10-2016, 11:52 AM
I would not fool with the plug in the seating die. The bottom edge is what seat's the bullet and it should measure the same as the lead in your rifle's throat. You polish it out and bullet's seated to the same OLL at the ogive will suddenly start being pushed into the lands.
I guess your dies are different than mine. The ID of the die body is separate from the seating stem (the adjustable part). Increasing the ID would only allow slightly larger diameter bullets to be inserted into the die. No difference in seating depth would occur unless the stem is moved...

OS OK
10-10-2016, 12:24 PM
If you hone that seating die out you will be reducing it's chance of inserting those casts with any real concentricity.
If successful in honing for that excessively fat cast you'll be dedicating it to those only, it'll never again seat a J-type with concentricity.

bullpen7979
10-10-2016, 07:01 PM
I guess your dies are different than mine. The ID of the die body is separate from the seating stem (the adjustable part). Increasing the ID would only allow slightly larger diameter bullets to be inserted into the die. No difference in seating depth would occur unless the stem is moved...
Right. Exactly. So I guess my thought was to get a new seating guy that has the guy body wide enough to permit the slug to travel freely through the center. As it is now the hole in the bore of the die is too skinny, and I could take the seating stem out entirely and would still get those slugs pushed way down in there.

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mdi
10-10-2016, 07:10 PM
Geeez guys! I wasn't talking about drilling the die out to 1/2"! Honing/polishing out a regular seating die .005" or so won't affect seating nor concentricity...

bigolsmokebomb
10-10-2016, 07:55 PM
i think the first thing we should know is what brand of die is it? With that information we can determine whether or not removing a few thousandths will cause any issues. Does the die crimp the case as well or do you have a seperate die for that?

bullpen7979
10-11-2016, 08:18 PM
Whoops; sorry guys. long day at work. Guy=Die. Bad text translation. Anyway......

It's a Lee die. And its just for seating. Crimp die is a separate die. And how, if I decided to do that, would one polish out a few thousandths? Fine sandpaper (800-1000 or so) on a dowel or other mandrel?

bigolsmokebomb
10-12-2016, 12:03 AM
I would think that if its just seating opening it up a few thou wouldnt hurt it at all. I would use some high grit sandpaper and some flitz metal polish on a wooden dowel. Just take out the seating stem before hand and you should be fine. If you do happen to mess it up its not that expensive to replace. Just take it really slow and measure often.