Seismic Sam wrote:Dammit!! I was just about to have a nice dinner of roadkill possum under my bridge after Snowgun disturbed me, and now a TOTAL n00b shows up!!
SHEESH!!!
Sorry.
Seismic Sam wrote:Your OAL's are about 50 thousandths short, and the fact that you can't pull the bullets with an inertia hammer suggests a limp wrist or an overly aggressive crimp. Fact number 1: Inertia pullers are to be whacked on concrete floors with a quick snapping wrist action, and it may take 2 or three tries. You don't whack the inertia puller on the reloading bench or any other surface.
I've tried both the bench and the concrete floor "with a quick snapping wrist action" for "2 or three tries" so I'm suspecting an overly aggressive crimp.
Seismic Sam wrote:Going with the overly agressive crimp, practically no rookie can set up a seating die that also does a roll crimp the first time they try, and PLEASE tell me that you even bothered to carefully read the instructions that came with the die!!
I did. Several times.
Seismic Sam wrote:The correct procedure is to run an empty case up into the seating die, and then screw the die in until it contacts the case. Back off the die a full half turn, and lock it in place. Then back off the bullet seating stem, put a bullet in the case, and run it back up into the seating die. Measure the OAL, and keep screwing in the seating stem down until you get the OAL called for.
After that, you back off the seating stem, unlock the die, and start turning it down in 1/8th turn increments until you feel the die start to crimp the case around the bullet. Using the knife edge of your digital micrometer, you probably want a roll crimp of no more that 5 mils in case diameter further back on the bullet, and yes, getting those knife edges set properly on the very edge of the case mouth will be a pain. Get used to it and get over it. When you have the crimp right (and buying a box of Cowboy Action 38's would be a good idea to see what dimensions the pro's use...) you lock the die into the press head, run the finished round back up into the die, and then screw down the seating stem until it contacts the bullet, and I don't mean screw down the stem hard! Then lock the stem in place.
As a rookie, I'll lay odds that you can't get the dimensions right in less than THREE full tries. Setting a combination seating and crimp die right requires a LOT of practice.
I made several (more than 3) dummy rounds to get the crimp in the right place. Of course, I then couldn't pull the bullets afterwards.
Seismic Sam wrote:Oh, and don't post again until you have read your reloading manual COVER-TO-COVER, and I mean EVERY page. Lyman #49, Speer #14, or Hornady #8 are all good choices.
I've ready Lyman #49 cover-to-cover. I re-read the chapter handgun loading before I started. I've also read the
Lyman Cast Bullet Handbook, 4th ed..