I have a almost unused Lyman case trimmer. Was playing around with it and some of the pilots are so large they wont fit a sized case mouth. Never had this issue with RCBS pilots. Anyone else had this issue with Lyman trimmer pilots?
I have a almost unused Lyman case trimmer. Was playing around with it and some of the pilots are so large they wont fit a sized case mouth. Never had this issue with RCBS pilots. Anyone else had this issue with Lyman trimmer pilots?
You don't say what caliber you are trimming. I ran some tests on 41 Mag a while back. After sizing I measured the ID of the mouths on three different brands of brass and found that there was a difference of .003 between the largest and the smallest. This could cause your problem if you are using thick walled brass.
At least the pilots are too large and you can polish them down for a custom fit.
What is the difference between the diameters of your Lyman and RCBS pilots?
Some times it's the pot,
Some times it's the pan,
It might even be the skillet,
But, most of the time, it's the cook.
doulos, Aren't you supposed to trim before sizing? Try those pilots with fired, but unsized brass to see whether the pilots are truly oversized.
From the on-line instruction book
Preparing the Cases
Before trimming, cases must be full-length or neck-resized and deprimed. Pilots are
designed to be used only with sized necks
Some times it's the pot,
Some times it's the pan,
It might even be the skillet,
But, most of the time, it's the cook.
I have always sized before trimming any case.
Cases vary in wall thickness, died also are set up to size to the thinnest case made then expand back up to the correct dia. While the difference in wall thickness may be .001-.002 this equals .002-.004 on the dia. This also affects the sizing die as the thicker case will be sized it smaller. The last is brass spring back, soft cases ( annealed ) dont have the same spring back as harder cases.
The next place to look is at the case mouths a burr on the inside will restrict the pilot also.
Measure a few sized case mouths then the pilot measure at 2 places on both 90* apart. See what you have dimension wise.
Expand a couple cases and measure them to see if this will work. chances are it will give you what you need.
when prepping to trim. I clean the cases and size then expand the necks. Deburr mouths lightly to remove burrs and or raised areas from dings. I then brush the neck with a phosphor bronze brush to clean bright.. They are now ready to trim. When trimming a lube the pilot with a light coat of light oil. this lubricates the pilot and cutter easing the force required. Chamfer and deburr.
I have cut a small 45* chamfer on the back of my pilots so they pull back thru the neck easier if a light burr is raised.
Many resizing dies also expand the neck diameter on the reverse stroke. If yours is not doing it, that could be your problem. You may have to expand the neck in a second operation. I do it in a second operation with a NOE expander that actually gives two diameters. A larger one to help the boolit start in the case and then a tighter one that gives the neck tension you want. My 45/70, 6.5mm(which I made) and 30.06 pilots all fit and work well on my Lyman, that’s pretty new.
I have never expanded case mouths before trimming. But then again Ive done most of my trimming with a Rcbs trimmer and pilots. This Lyman trimmer and pilots came with a Lyman reloading kit that had the Spar T as the press. Just to give you an idea how old they are.
In all fairness I also have not trimmed much due to the calibers I have shot over the years. But every case I have trimmed was sized first because I know sizing lengthens cases. And wouldnt case mouth expanding give a slight false OAL reading?
I have tried resizing with various dies also to see if there was a difference. An older Lyman set and newer RCBS. They size to very close diameters after measuring.
I actually tried turning down the 45-70 pilot a bit by chucking it in a drill and running it on sandpaper. It is much harder to reduce the diameter than I thought it would be. Could be just higher quality of older stuff. LOL
Thanks for the replies and ideas everyone.
Lyman's nifty little mid-60s Spar-T turret press preceded their first case trimmer (their excellent Universal Trimmer) by some 8-10 years, IIRC. That was a long time ago and I don't remember for sure but seems Lyman put their very good economy model (Accu-Trimmer) in a kit with that press ... but both trimmers use the same pilots.
(In 1995 I converted my own original 1965 simple toggle link Lyman Spar-T press into a compound/dual link system; over-all, it's not equal to my RC II but I love to use it for special stuff!)
Not really but, again, I'm not sure what you're calling what and that matters. It sounds like you're using "neck expanding" as if it means the same thing as "mouth flaring" but they are not the same.... wouldnt case mouth expanding give a slight false OAL reading?
Neck expanding usually expands the whole resized case neck interior to about 2 thou less than bullet diameter. (BTW, going smaller than 2 thou does not increase bullet grip, it only requires us to use more force to expand the neck while seating the bullets.) We need the whole neck to be expanded to the same diameter for both the bullets AND trimmer pilots!
On the other hand, case mouth flaring (or belling) is only a few thou deep. It's done to make it easy for bullets, especially cast boolits, to start straight seating without damaging those critical bullet heels.
I've never checked to see if expanding or flaring before or after trimming matters to case length but I'd bet both of my dollars it doesn't make a bit of difference on anyone's targets; if it did matter we'd see lots of cautions to only do it the best way.
Bottom line, we usually need to full length size and neck expand our cases before trimming just so we can get the pilots in there.
Last edited by 1hole; 12-09-2021 at 09:11 PM.
Thanks
Its a Universal trimmer its stamped with that name on it. The 6 hole turret press is long gone. I figure I bought that kit in mid 80s. Gave it to a friend who was interested in reloading. I learned on that press. So I figured to to pass it on to him and his sons.
I wasnt using it as much anymore and my buddy inquired about it when seeing it bolted to my bench without dies in it. So I gave it to him. It was a good press. But I used my Rock Chucker more. And now I have 2 single stages set up with Hornady lock n load bushings and a Dillon 550.
doulas and Greg, I use a Forster case trimmer whose pilots will not enter sized brass, hence the above advice. Also, my experience with fired revolver brass from 4 such guns is that they shrink slightly after firing and no amount of FL resizing will make them longer. A taper crimp die or dies if loading for different calibers, eliminates the problem of varying case lengths and has had no effect on accuracy that I can see.
I have the same problem with my Lyman pilot in .22 centerfire and my .223/5.56 brass.
I run sized cases on my Wilson trimmer, unsized on the Lyman.
I would try running your sized cases after a test run on a belling die set just enough to expand the mouth of the case at a minimal amount. Just to see if it makes a difference.
Three44s
Quote Originally Posted by Bret4207
“There is more to this than dumping lead in a hole.”
I like taper crimping and use it a lot, if I know the round won’t be going through rough usage, like being packed over tough terrain. I think it extends brass life.
It’s a mystery to me why so many have had problems with the size of the pilots. Have the pilots been checked with a micrometer and compared to what the neck size should be? Maybe there were some problems with quality control when they were made.
Last edited by GregLaROCHE; 12-11-2021 at 04:20 PM. Reason: Typo
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