The goal is 70 to 77 grain .224 flat base open tip bullets.
I thought I could get there with a .930 jacket.
But I am running into problems.
First problem:
The ejector punch is punching through the bullet when ejecting the bullet. One-third to half of my attempts yesterday were failures in this way.
The jacket's average weight was 18.8, and the core weight was 58.2. The problem I ran into here was that the lead was squirted out the open tip. I would still have strike-throughs with the ejector pin.
So, I dropped the core weight to 53.2 grains for a 72-grain bullet. However, I still had a difficult time ejecting the swaged bullets. In more than 20 of my sample runs, the ejection pin pushed through.
Yesterday, I dropped the core weight further to 50.2 grains for a 69-grain bullet, and my failure rate skyrocketed to nearly half.
Am I swaging it too deep into the die?
Second problem:
There are deformations at the ogive, creases, or dents, for instance. If I run less lube, the bullet sticks; if I run more lube, I get deformations and dents.
At first, I thought this was due to too much lube, and that may be part of it. But when I moved to less lube, the swage bullet stuck, and it either splits at the ogive of the ejector pin or pushes through.
Third symptom:
The open tip is massive. I thought I needed to swage the core seated blank far enough into the die to nearly close up the bullet tip. Then, the ejector pin would push against that closed-up portion of the jacket and eject it.
It seems like that isn't happening. If I lower the swage 1/3rd of a turn, lead squirts out the tip around the swaged bullet. If I back it off 1/2 a turn, the open tip is half again as large as the ejection punch. Anywhere in between those two might make a bullet.
Is it possible that I've set the ejection punch too long? That when I swage the blank, the bullet tip is swaging around the tip of ejector punch thus never closing the tip of the bullet? And since it is swaging around the ejection punch, the bullet is harder to eject, thus the higher instance of strike-throughs.