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For me, if anyone tells you its ok, let them fire it with their face next to the action & directly behind the bolt...![]()

straightshooter wrote:I regularly resize Winchester once fired brass to 243 and I have done many hundreds of cases for myself and for friends.
With good lube it can be done in one pass.
If your lube isn't quite up to the task then try sizing the case in incremental stages. First say 1mm of the neck and then relube just the neck. Then a little more and relube the neck. You will soon get the feel for how it has to be done in order not to collapse the shoulder.
Also if you start with a dry die then things will improve as lube spreads through the die but you will also get shoulder dents if there is too much lube.
If that batch of cases just happen to have thicker necks or a little more anneal on the shoulder then they will collapse.
Cases with collapsed shoulders can't be rehabilitated.

marksman wrote: l have a feeling it would be just simpler to buy some good 243 cases

Bill wrote:ash_hendo what rifle will you be firing these in ?

bigrich wrote:i have a resizing related question , with prefererce to reanealing . would you guys aneal before or after resizing , and why![]()
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bigrich wrote:i have a resizing related question , with prefererce to reanealing . would you guys aneal before or after resizing , and why![]()
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I always try to do as little working as possible following an anneal, which usually comes in the form of a collet neck size. So if you have the collet neck sizing die, I reckon do the anneal after the form (so long as the round is chambering ok following the form, i.e. the shoulders are set back enough for smooth chambering). 

in2anity wrote:bigrich wrote:i have a resizing related question , with prefererce to reanealing . would you guys aneal before or after resizing , and why![]()
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It's a bit of a "chicken or egg" scenario isn't it BR. Annealing is undoing the brittleness of working the brass. The question is, do you want this softening to occur before or after the form.I always try to do as little working as possible following an anneal, which usually comes in the form of a collet neck size. So if you have the collet neck sizing die, I reckon do the anneal after the form (so long as the round is chambering ok following the form, i.e. the shoulders are set back enough for smooth chambering).
So I guess in this scenario, this is the order i'd personally take:
1) Form the brass with a FLS die
2) Test chambering with a dummy round
3) Anneal
4) Lastly, collet neck-size to achieve neck tension

ash_hendo wrote:marksman wrote: l have a feeling it would be just simpler to buy some good 243 cases
I forgot to mention why I was doing this, these are Palma brass with the small primer pocket, if anyone tells me where I can buy "243 Palma" I'll give up my efforts!
High attrition rate, but I have 20 usable cartridges now which I will test with light loads, resize, trim etc and measure all the criticals...

ash_hendo wrote:bigrich wrote:i have a resizing related question , with prefererce to reanealing . would you guys aneal before or after resizing , and why![]()
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I'm not an expert, new to this myself, but from metalworking knowledge - annealing makes the metal softer if you let it cool slowly, so it is more malleable and can survive being manipulated. So before resizing makes sense to me.
If you cool quickly it makes it harder and more brittle and more likely to crack when formed or fired. like a blacksmith plunging a hot horseshoe into oil....

SCJ429 wrote:ash_hendo wrote:marksman wrote: l have a feeling it would be just simpler to buy some good 243 cases
I forgot to mention why I was doing this, these are Palma brass with the small primer pocket, if anyone tells me where I can buy "243 Palma" I'll give up my efforts!
High attrition rate, but I have 20 usable cartridges now which I will test with light loads, resize, trim etc and measure all the criticals...
I have no experience with Starline brass but I suspect that Lapua large primer brass would give you a better result. I have used Lapua Palma brass to make 243 and 260 cases. It did give me more firings before the primer pocket loosened up but it is really only an advantage if you are pushing for some extra speed to get you to a faster node.
Not that I am an expert but using sizing wax and various bushings in my dies, I do not loose any cases when necking down.
What bullet are you looking to shoot with your 243.?

Oldbloke wrote:ash_hendo wrote:bigrich wrote:i have a resizing related question , with prefererce to reanealing . would you guys aneal before or after resizing , and why![]()
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I'm not an expert, new to this myself, but from metalworking knowledge - annealing makes the metal softer if you let it cool slowly, so it is more malleable and can survive being manipulated. So before resizing makes sense to me.
If you cool quickly it makes it harder and more brittle and more likely to crack when formed or fired. like a blacksmith plunging a hot horseshoe into oil....
yes correct
No, that applies to carbon steel. Not non-Ferris metals.
In fact when annealing brass makes no difference if you quench it or not. I dont.


SCJ429 wrote:I used Lapua Palma brass to push 105 and 107 projectiles as fast as I could. If I wasn't leaning on my load I would not bother with small primer pockets. I got some decent life out of Lapua 243 brass that I pushed reasonably hard. Good luck with your project, is it a hunting rifle or something for the range?


SCJ429 wrote:There is not much between the 243 and Creedmoor case, I put the 243 AI reamer up my barrel, mainly because the 40 degree shoulders look cool and it helps to psych out the 6x47 Lapua shooters who suddenly think you have something special.
Have you thought of chambering your barrel in 6 BR?


SCJ429 wrote:That is exactly what I do to my 6mmBR barrels. I shoot about 1500 through it and then rechamber to 243AI. Shoot about another 1000 and the barrel is done.
You could do the same with a Dasher and then clean up the throat with your Creedmoor reamer.
