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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Reloading
Reloading question
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<blockquote data-quote="Omega" data-source="post: 5059192" data-attributes="member: 20060"><p>Good catch, didn't notice that. As to the wire wheel, I'd use a brass wheel, steel one may mar the surfaces more than they may already be by pitting. Evaporust works great, I would dunk my dies in it every now and then, humidity would keep rusting the surface when I had my reloading gear in the shed.</p><p></p><p>OP: contact RCBS, they may send one or at least sell you one.</p><p></p><p>As Hunter 257W does, I too use a loading block and charge one case at a time. Once the block is full, you can shine a light and check for any inconsistencies. On my Lee Turret, I use it as a single stage, even though I have used it as intended, I always go back to single stage. Just feels better to me to do it that way, and reduces the possibility of a bad charge, light or heavy since I manually charge each case.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Omega, post: 5059192, member: 20060"] Good catch, didn't notice that. As to the wire wheel, I'd use a brass wheel, steel one may mar the surfaces more than they may already be by pitting. Evaporust works great, I would dunk my dies in it every now and then, humidity would keep rusting the surface when I had my reloading gear in the shed. OP: contact RCBS, they may send one or at least sell you one. As Hunter 257W does, I too use a loading block and charge one case at a time. Once the block is full, you can shine a light and check for any inconsistencies. On my Lee Turret, I use it as a single stage, even though I have used it as intended, I always go back to single stage. Just feels better to me to do it that way, and reduces the possibility of a bad charge, light or heavy since I manually charge each case. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Reloading
Reloading question
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