Hi folks. Been reading this forum for some time-- good stuff-- now have a situation: Expander ball siezes in Hornady cases.
Bought a Ruger M77 in 220 Swift (Varmint) a few weeks ago, then bought two boxes of factory ammo- one box Remington, one box Hornady, for break in and initial cases to reload. Also bought a new 3 die set of Redding dies.
Fired the factory rounds, neck sized (normally), and reloaded the cases with a mixed bag of powder and bullets/weights. Two rounds would not chamber - but (carelessly) lost their identity after I broke them down. (I had already decided to full length resize the whole batch.)
At the bench, while FL resizing, a few cases went thru normally and a few were extremely difficult to complete the upstroke (had to disassemble the die and cut off a coulpe of cases). I finally understood the Remington cases were going thru normally, but the Hornadys were all tight. All 20 Rems were fine; I stopped after 10 of the Hornadys.
Salients:
- All cases were between max and trim lengths before and after the FL sizing step. Didn't make note of lengths by brand, just quickly measured each case to insure it was in the range.
- All cases were well lubed.
- No signs of pressure on any cases.
- None of the first reloads were not at max powder charge (- .5 grain minimum).
- Powder was IMR 4831 and IMR 4064
- Bullets were 50 and 55 grain Nosler
- Rem primers in all cases / loads
- Loads were randomly and pretty evenly distributed between the Rem and Hornady cases (although each case and load were recorded).
- Note this was the first use of the FL die.
A friend suggested the die might be incorrectly adjusted, putting a slight crimp on the mouth of the case, making the ball difficult to extract. Possible - but why not the Rems as well??
Thoughts?
Bought a Ruger M77 in 220 Swift (Varmint) a few weeks ago, then bought two boxes of factory ammo- one box Remington, one box Hornady, for break in and initial cases to reload. Also bought a new 3 die set of Redding dies.
Fired the factory rounds, neck sized (normally), and reloaded the cases with a mixed bag of powder and bullets/weights. Two rounds would not chamber - but (carelessly) lost their identity after I broke them down. (I had already decided to full length resize the whole batch.)
At the bench, while FL resizing, a few cases went thru normally and a few were extremely difficult to complete the upstroke (had to disassemble the die and cut off a coulpe of cases). I finally understood the Remington cases were going thru normally, but the Hornadys were all tight. All 20 Rems were fine; I stopped after 10 of the Hornadys.
Salients:
- All cases were between max and trim lengths before and after the FL sizing step. Didn't make note of lengths by brand, just quickly measured each case to insure it was in the range.
- All cases were well lubed.
- No signs of pressure on any cases.
- None of the first reloads were not at max powder charge (- .5 grain minimum).
- Powder was IMR 4831 and IMR 4064
- Bullets were 50 and 55 grain Nosler
- Rem primers in all cases / loads
- Loads were randomly and pretty evenly distributed between the Rem and Hornady cases (although each case and load were recorded).
- Note this was the first use of the FL die.
A friend suggested the die might be incorrectly adjusted, putting a slight crimp on the mouth of the case, making the ball difficult to extract. Possible - but why not the Rems as well??
Thoughts?