Wapiti wrote:Because most people dont have diesel or kero in t8ns anymore, you coukd use WD40. Most homes have a can.
WD40 is a perfect cleaner, it will remove the sticky preservative film inside them. You can just spray it inside and clean out with cotton tips.
Unscrew and remove the decapping rod, bullet seater whatever, prior of course.
Of course, don't use this stuff for sizing lube, it's not an extreme pressure lubricant. Also, make sure there's no WD or kero etc inside your seating die for obvious reasons.
When finished reloading, a quick spray on the outside will stop the unblued dies from corroding. The case lube inside your sizing die will keep that in good nick too.
bladeracer wrote:Wapiti wrote:Because most people dont have diesel or kero in t8ns anymore, you coukd use WD40. Most homes have a can.
WD40 is a perfect cleaner, it will remove the sticky preservative film inside them. You can just spray it inside and clean out with cotton tips.
Unscrew and remove the decapping rod, bullet seater whatever, prior of course.
Of course, don't use this stuff for sizing lube, it's not an extreme pressure lubricant. Also, make sure there's no WD or kero etc inside your seating die for obvious reasons.
When finished reloading, a quick spray on the outside will stop the unblued dies from corroding. The case lube inside your sizing die will keep that in good nick too.
WD40 isn't _any_ kind of lubricant, it's a Water Dispersant, and is not a rust preventative either.
bladeracer wrote:Wapiti wrote:Because most people dont have diesel or kero in t8ns anymore, you coukd use WD40. Most homes have a can.
WD40 is a perfect cleaner, it will remove the sticky preservative film inside them. You can just spray it inside and clean out with cotton tips.
Unscrew and remove the decapping rod, bullet seater whatever, prior of course.
Of course, don't use this stuff for sizing lube, it's not an extreme pressure lubricant. Also, make sure there's no WD or kero etc inside your seating die for obvious reasons.
When finished reloading, a quick spray on the outside will stop the unblued dies from corroding. The case lube inside your sizing die will keep that in good nick too.
WD40 isn't _any_ kind of lubricant, it's a Water Dispersant, and is not a rust preventative either.
Wapiti wrote:bladeracer wrote:Wapiti wrote:Because most people dont have diesel or kero in t8ns anymore, you coukd use WD40. Most homes have a can.
WD40 is a perfect cleaner, it will remove the sticky preservative film inside them. You can just spray it inside and clean out with cotton tips.
Unscrew and remove the decapping rod, bullet seater whatever, prior of course.
Of course, don't use this stuff for sizing lube, it's not an extreme pressure lubricant. Also, make sure there's no WD or kero etc inside your seating die for obvious reasons.
When finished reloading, a quick spray on the outside will stop the unblued dies from corroding. The case lube inside your sizing die will keep that in good nick too.
WD40 isn't _any_ kind of lubricant, it's a Water Dispersant, and is not a rust preventative either.
Mate do you just understand your own words just now?
Respectfully, you've just contradicted yourself.
You say its a water dispersant, which has the exact function of a rust preventative, as it also coats the surface, excluding moisture laden air.
A "water dispersant " CANNOT work without having a film strength and penetrant coating quality that is stronger than water. So it lifts the water from the steel, by coating it excluding the moisture completely.
And as I just finished writing in my post previous not to use it as a lubricant on dies, although it has very average lubricating qualities. Just not an extreme pressure lubricant. By extreme pressure I'm referring to keeping metal surfaces apart under high pressure, like sizing operations.
It certainly is a rust preventative, we've used it on bright machined steel for 40 years and it's never failed. On firearms, ways of lathes, anything where it's convenient. When the solvent flashes off, the coating thickens and has an extremely good film strength. This old wives tale you've just repeated has been peddled for years.
I've sprayed it on my dies for 40 years and NEVER had any rusting. Because it is a rust preventative by the very function of being a water dispersant.
Stopping rust is just a function of coating the steel with a film that keeps oxygen off the metal, lifts any moisture present (like your salty sweat for example) so none is trapped underneath the film to cause rust. You just described the process, by calling it a water dispersant.
We just bought another lathe for the workshop. It was coated with this spray-on thick waxy film for shipping. We just sprayed it with WD40 and left it for 10 minutes. The solvents in the WD40 dissolved this thick film and we just simply wiped it all off with clean rags, without needing to brush on and clean up stinking diesel splashes and mess. And diesel and kero is a hopeless dissolver of rust coatings. If you have time to waste, go ahead.
You lot reading this make up your own minds. What annoys me is misinformation. Again, I'll only ever post a reply from experience of my own, not others.
Wapiti wrote:Mate do you just understand your own words just now?
The real shame here is peddling misinformation.
You say its a water dispersant, which has the exact function of a rust preventative.
And as I just finished writing in my post previous not to use it as a lubricant on dies, although it is. Just not an extreme pressure lubricant. By extreme pressure I'm referring to keeping metal surfaces apart under pressure.
It certainly is a rust preventative, we've used it on bright machined steel for 40 years and it's never failed. On firearms, ways of lathes, anything where it's convenient. When the solvent flashes off, the coating thickens and has an extremely good film strength. This old wives tail has been peddled for years.
I've sprayed it on my dies for 40 years and NEVER had any rusting.
Stopping rust is just a function of coating the steel with a film that keeps oxygen off the metal, lifts any moisture present (like your salty sweat for example) so none is trapped underneath the film to cause rust. You just described the process. Do you just argue to belittle others and elevate yourself?
We just bought another lathe for the workshop. It was coated with this spray-on thick waxy film for shipping. We just sprayed it with WD40 and left it for 10 minutes. The solvents in the WD40 dissolved this thick film and we just simply wiped it all off with clean rags, without needing to brush on and clean up stinking diesel splashes and mess.
You lot reading this make up your own minds. What annoys me is misinformation.
Fester wrote:Back to presses, how many of us keep our press lubed and looking great, then check out the lower part of the ram that stays hidden underneath and find it covered in surface rust and looking pretty ordinary?
GQshayne wrote:I am just a hunter Oldbloke. Started reloading in the mid 1980's. So far to this day I have never annealed a case. Unlikely I ever will.
As for case trimmers I have a Hornady Camlock one. Seems like a good thing. But before that I had a Lee calibre specific one that I used for the .243 for years. Cheap and simple. I would just use them if I had my time again. Too easy to use.
I would add to your list primer pocket tools.
GQshayne wrote:But before that I had a Lee calibre specific one that I used for the .243 for years. Cheap and simple. I would just use them if I had my time again. Too easy to use.
Oldbloke wrote:I think keep in mind Robin hasn't even mentioned the intended use of his ammo. Hunting, plinking practice, competition. For the first 3 all he needs to concentrate on is the basics. Initially that's what he needs to do anyway.
No mention of how many rounds a year.
He did say he didn't want to go overboard spending money.
I looked at that kit and he has all he needs to start except case lube, which I suspect he would have purchased when he got the kit.
He has dies. 308
Kit comes with a vernier.
In future he will need;
A better scale.
A method of trimming cases.
A method of annealing.
Yes, a note book is a must.
I also record my current loads on an excel spread sheet.
Yes, take basic notes on the targets. I just do it during cease fires.
Keep the targets. I just file them all in a leversrch folder these days. They are a A4 sized.
For the average hunter/loader Lee RGB dies are all you need. My s**ty 223 Marlin shoots 15-20mm using them. If keen pay the extra i guess.
The other thing is there is heaps of used gear out there, often cheap. Why?
Because loading isn't everyone's cup of tea and plenty spend a heap, then sell it all 12 months later.
And it's false economy to spend heaps on fancy equipment to only load 80 rounds a year.
Oldbloke wrote:I've been thinking of buying two of these, 30.06 & 223.
Recommended trim length for 30.06 is 2.484.
That unit trims to the max length,,,2.494.
Not sure why Lee do that??
https://youtu.be/teUjyhY5pHA?si=t9t1kjz7KG9wcmgt
Robin wrote:My intention at the moment is really to learn , make mistakes now rather then later , as far as shooting, it will mostly be target shooting, however once I develop what works , I will use it for hunting, the only competition shooting for me is against myself.
With the Lube, yes I brought the Hornady one shot spray lube and it works well I think, however the kit actually comes with a waxy lube in a tub, so its a little misleading, however I'm sure I'll use it eventually so its ok.
A trimmer is next on my list and then I'll upgrade the scale, other then that, the rest of the kit looks pretty decent.
For a notebook, I will be using a tablet, that way its recorded straight away and saves recording it and recording it, but this is really the IT nerd side of me.
I make my own home brew been and even tho it will take me forever to get my money back, its about perfecting the perfect beer
bladeracer wrote:Oldbloke wrote:I've been thinking of buying two of these, 30.06 & 223.
Recommended trim length for 30.06 is 2.484.
That unit trims to the max length,,,2.494.
Not sure why Lee do that??
https://youtu.be/teUjyhY5pHA?si=t9t1kjz7KG9wcmgt
I couldn't find a spec sheet saying what length they trim to, but 2.494" is the SAAMI spec for it. The cutter is adjustable though.
https://leeprecision.com/files/instruct/QT3989.pdf
Oldbloke wrote:bladeracer wrote:Oldbloke wrote:I've been thinking of buying two of these, 30.06 & 223.
Recommended trim length for 30.06 is 2.484.
That unit trims to the max length,,,2.494.
Not sure why Lee do that??
https://youtu.be/teUjyhY5pHA?si=t9t1kjz7KG9wcmgt
I couldn't find a spec sheet saying what length they trim to, but 2.494" is the SAAMI spec for it. The cutter is adjustable though.
https://leeprecision.com/files/instruct/QT3989.pdf
Wrong one. Not adjustable. But I guess you can grind a bit off the gauge/shaft