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Thread: Crimping on the flats not the crimp groove

  1. #1
    Boolit Master FISH4BUGS's Avatar
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    Crimping on the flats not the crimp groove

    I have a Hensley & Gibbs 12s mould that has a neat little light 38/357 bullet.
    It does not have a crimp groove, rather you are instructed to crimp on the front driving band a/k/a flats.
    Has anyone had any experience doing their bullets this way? Not necessarily with this particular bullet but in general.
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  2. #2
    Boolit Master mehavey's Avatar
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    Usually it's crimp over the ogive curvature -- objective is to keep bullet from walking OUT.

    I have crimped into "the flat" before -- during seating if soft alloy/light-moderate crimp -- separate crimp to keep from bulging the case if more than just a light-moderate crimp/hard alloy.

    Personally, I'd crimp juuuuust short of the flat -- top of grease groove -- and call it a day
    Last edited by mehavey; 08-24-2020 at 04:26 PM.

  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    Why not just put a taper crimp on it?
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  4. #4
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance
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    And don't 'hog' the taper crimp
    Regards
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  5. #5
    Boolit Master Win94ae's Avatar
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    I crimp wherever the case mouth ends up; that is with handguns or rifles, no matter the type of crimp.

  6. #6
    Boolit Master
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    with lead boolit i crimp where i need to, crimp groove or not

  7. #7
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    If a boolit has NO crimp groove you have two choices .
    1.) Roll crimp over the front driving band edge . Most 38/357 dies will have a roll crimp die .
    2.) Taper crimp on the boolits smooth sides aka "flats" . I taper crimp 9mm boolits (with no crimp groove) loaded into 38 or 357 cases by using the taper crimp die from a 9mm luger die set .

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  8. #8
    Boolit Master
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    A very light crimp should work. Too much crimp and the case starts to buckle, not enough crimp and the flare from the expander die remains - you want to be somewhere in-between there.

  9. #9
    Boolit Master

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    When I load a clone of the HG 68 SWC into 45 Colt cases, I seat so that a crimp can be applied just over the bullet shoulder.

    A taper crimp won't do much at all to prevent bullet creep, but would remove the bell. It would work for a low intensity round that otherwise has decent neck tension.
    Last edited by Taterhead; 08-24-2020 at 08:33 PM.
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  10. #10
    Boolit Master trails4u's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Win94ae View Post
    I crimp wherever the case mouth ends up; that is with handguns or rifles, no matter the type of crimp.
    Agreed.
    "Do not follow where the path might lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail" Ralph Waldo Emerson

  11. #11
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by mehavey View Post
    Usually it's crimp over the ogive curvature -- objective is to keep bullet from walking OUT.

    I have crimped into "the flat" before -- during seating if soft alloy/light-moderate crimp -- separate crimp to keep from bulging the case if more than just a light-moderate crimp/hard alloy.

    Personally, I'd crimp juuuuust short of the flat -- top of grease groove -- and call it a day
    With tube type magazines, ala most lever actions, the chief idea is to keep the bullet from traveling inward! Applications vary. If crimping on a drive band, a precisely adjusted taper crimp may suit so long as the band is not too narrow. The Lee collet crimp die may be an option here. If rounds are revolver only, crimp where it need crimped for correct OAL to keep the bullets in the case under recoil.

    prs

  12. #12
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    For a SWC w/o crimp groove it is common to seat the bullet with the foremost shoulder/driving band seated a few thousandths below the case mouth and lightly roll crimp over the edge. Crimping on the ogive would need the bullet to be seated way too deep and for use in a tube magazine, use the proper bullet with a crimp groove...
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  13. #13
    Boolit Master
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    I'm with MDI- I use SWC bullets that are heavy for caliber and have to crimp just over the foremost shoulder to be within max length for chamber (revolver)
    Loren

  14. #14
    Boolit Master Ozark mike's Avatar
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    I have crimped where i need to but i try to find a mold that will allow me to crimp in a groove. I do not recommend doing this in tube guns where a spring and heavy recoil may allow it to go deeper in the case with smokless.
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  15. #15
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    I'm a big taper crimp fan.
    It tends to be more forgiving for little differences in case length,
    and lends itself to crimping where ever the right OAL comes up, and has been better for me than a roll crimp.
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  16. #16
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    FWIW, since 1969 I have been seating bullets to the crimp groove or cannelure and disregarding book OAL (revolver ammo). I found no reason to do different like short cylinders/long bullet combinations and it has worked for me in all my revolvers (9). When I first started I figgered the bullet designers knew their business and located the groove or cannelure in the correct place. I started with the basic "roll crimp in grooves for revolvers, and taper crimp for semi-autos" and that has worked for tens of thousands of rounds with no problems. Of course I've experimented with different types and different applications of crimping (Profile crimping, collet crimping, stake crimping, roll crimping semi-auto handloads, taper crimping revolver loads extra heave and no crimp), but the basics continue to work today. I have no need to use smooth sided bullets in my revolvers and ignore crimp grooves when using cast bullets with grooves in my semi-auto loads. I even experimented by trimming 100, 44 Magnum cases to .001" of each other and crimping using a scale to measure pressure to keep crimps as close as possible and found results no better than mixed brass and crimping by "feel" or against a stop. Perhaps I'm trying to say some aspects of reloading are easily "over thought" and I believe crimping handgun ammo is one...
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  17. #17
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by robg View Post
    with lead boolit i crimp where i need to, crimp groove or not
    What he said. That's why I quit shooting jacketed handgun bullets.

  18. #18
    Boolit Master

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    Quote Originally Posted by mdi View Post
    FWIW, since 1969 I have been seating bullets to the crimp groove or cannelure and disregarding book OAL (revolver ammo). I found no reason to do different like short cylinders/long bullet combinations and it has worked for me in all my revolvers (9). When I first started I figgered the bullet designers knew their business and located the groove or cannelure in the correct place. I started with the basic "roll crimp in grooves for revolvers, and taper crimp for semi-autos" and that has worked for tens of thousands of rounds with no problems. Of course I've experimented with different types and different applications of crimping (Profile crimping, collet crimping, stake crimping, roll crimping semi-auto handloads, taper crimping revolver loads extra heave and no crimp), but the basics continue to work today. I have no need to use smooth sided bullets in my revolvers and ignore crimp grooves when using cast bullets with grooves in my semi-auto loads. I even experimented by trimming 100, 44 Magnum cases to .001" of each other and crimping using a scale to measure pressure to keep crimps as close as possible and found results no better than mixed brass and crimping by "feel" or against a stop. Perhaps I'm trying to say some aspects of reloading are easily "over thought" and I believe crimping handgun ammo is one...
    MDI, I agree with 99.9% of your statement. I have a mold my Dad bought for 41 Mag that was a SACEO Keith style boolit. When crimped in the groove, it barely fit the the S&W M57 Cylinder, and absolutely would not chamber in my Marlin 1894C in 41 M. Well, it would if I crimped in the front driving band or on the shoulder. My fix was a SAECO 420 TC mold, which fed well in both the S&W M57 and Marlin 1894C.

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  19. #19
    Boolit Master Jack Stanley's Avatar
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    Most of my loading is done with a taper crimp and sometimes the overall length needed means a taper crimp on a flat . It hasn't affected accuracy that I have noticed . It even works with revolver and lever action ammo until the load gets real heavy .

    Jack
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  20. #20
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    I use a LEE collet style FCD for the purpose posed by the OP. I have the 357M FCD, but I don't believe Lee makes one for 38 spl, but they do custom orders, although maybe not during the covid?
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