from here it looks like they had a huge flare at the tops of them. I have a crimp die from Lee for every caliber that I reload. and two for most, one a Taper and one a Roll crimp to use on lead bullets with crimp grooves.
I have a factory crimp die. Tested neck tension after using it. My cast bullets have no neck tension. The brass rebounds the lead doesn't only the crimp holds the bullet in place.
I can't believe how many people buy a combo seat and crimp die and still crimp separate. If your die doesn't crimp then yeah get one otherwise useless when you have a better one in your die already
Excellent video, very helpful in diagnosing a similar problem I've been having. Thank you!
This die is a must and works great, nice explanation sir.
Excellent video!! Thanks for sharing, just what I was needing to know
from here it looks like they had a huge flare at the tops of them. I have a crimp die from Lee for every caliber that I reload. and two for most, one a Taper and one a Roll crimp to use on lead bullets with crimp grooves.
Thanks for the info.
Great video and great demonstration
I have a factory crimp die. Tested neck tension after using it. My cast bullets have no neck tension. The brass rebounds the lead doesn't only the crimp holds the bullet in place.
I can't believe how many people buy a combo seat and crimp die and still crimp separate. If your die doesn't crimp then yeah get one otherwise useless when you have a better one in your die already
The bullet nose should not stick out of that gauge get in real world know what your doing
LOL, your world must not be as real as you think because you obviously have no idea what youre talking about.
I don't think he knows that the gauge is the exact measurement of the chamber of the 45.