Ah ok, came off perfectly fine for me with wire wool. Learn something new each dayBecause he would have to clean it off, which the tumbler/vibratory cleaner/ultrasound may or may not do very well.
Ah ok, came off perfectly fine for me with wire wool. Learn something new each dayBecause he would have to clean it off, which the tumbler/vibratory cleaner/ultrasound may or may not do very well.
Keep me posted on scales please, may pick up a set as a back uploving my new scales that came yesterday, and using mm over inchesView attachment 348227View attachment 348228
Exactly this - the bullet won’t need cleaned.Because he would have to clean it off, which the tumbler/vibratory cleaner/ultrasound may or may not do very well.
that sounds like a good plan to follow thanks, i guess its all about getting a rhythm going and keep a good check on things, iv noticed im doing a few things now that you guys have suggested, that are now engrained in my brain, im confident it will all come together soonMy system is - after you have sized the case put the case with the head down into the holder which indicates a non primered case , then the next op is to take the case & prime this case and you then put it back into the same hole in the holder with the head & primer up, you will then notice any missed/unprimed cases, tnow to put the powder in/charge take this case add the powder & place the case back into the same position now with primered head down and pop the required bullet into the neck with the point down, this helps to avoid double charges if you do this every time and keeps muck etc out of the inside of the case. When the lets say 50x are all done take a charged case & bullet and seat it then put it back into the same hole.
Easy to keep to a system. Like wiping after doing a jobbie.

I have a pair just like that, same model, got them a pound cheaper on Amazon, works fine to 0.02gn repeatable. One "seed" or pellet of RS60 is about 0.02 to 0.03 grains.Keep me posted on scales please, may pick up a set as a back up![]()
Answer is yes so long as they are Boxer primers. NATO rounds can be Berdan primers, which are a real pain to deal with: drilling them out and swaging in a piece of 0.22LR case so they fit Boxer primers, is probably more than you wish to take on at the moment. Even getting Berdan primers out is a pain, as they have two flash holes, neither of which are central to the case.can i reload some once used 5.56 brass thats been given to me,
different makes of brass are all ok to use aren't they, i have hornady, sako and ADI,
and do make of primers make much if any difference as i have 200 CCI then i will be onto the 1000 Geco primers, it would seem that its get what you can whilst you can at the moment,
a couple of questions if a may,
can i reload some once used 5.56 brass thats been given to me,
different makes of brass are all ok to use aren't they, i have hornady, sako and ADI,
and do make of primers make much if any difference as i have 200 CCI then i will be onto the 1000 Geco primers, it would seem that its get what you can whilst you can at the moment,
thanks, i wont bother with the 5.56 brass then, it was given to me but theres only 20 or so,Don't complicate your process , keep it simple . Don't mix brass , as has been stated by AlexD , case volumes vary and the effects on pressure you've witnessed on GRT .
Put the 5.56 brass to one side and forget about it for now , it requires more case preparation than your other brass .
When developing a load , remain with the same components , do not mix components . If you change one component you may need to redevelop the load , this includes primers . Changing primers can have an effect on accuracy and velocities , changing cases may have a huge effect on pressure , as previously discussed .
Remember to write the charge weight on the bullets as suggested by gixer1 , as you load each weight . If the bullets are too small , simply colour them with different colours and make a note .
I gave up polishing cases sometime ago but on this occasion I’ve dug out my tumbler to a;- provide the Op with a little encouragement and b;- avoid confusion when the cases are annealed by a kind & helpful SD member:They look worse after ultrasonic cleaning than they did before! Now I am asking what is the trick, with a different slant on the question.

Who in NATO loads 5.56 with berdan primers? just curious.I have a pair just like that, same model, got them a pound cheaper on Amazon, works fine to 0.02gn repeatable. One "seed" or pellet of RS60 is about 0.02 to 0.03 grains.
I use it to check every load that comes off the balance: I use an RCBS Uniflow to get the charge minus 0.5 grain, then use an RCBS balance with a TargetMaster trickler for the final load. I check every load on that little electronic scale.
The main lab scale I have is 10x more accurate but takes longer to settle when doing a batch, hence the cheap and cheerful one is the one that gets the use.
On the errors I have noted, the Uniflow can be miles out if one has not tapped it hard to get the load out, and even then 0.5 grain error is not unusual. The Targetmaster is good to about +/-0.04 grains, until the thing moves (plan to add an LED to it to say when the sensor is activated, so it can be set up better), and when it moves on the balance, it may be out by any amount and hopefully notices the balance arm going to the wrong place.
BTW: I know the international symbol for grains is gr, but as grams also starts with gr, I always use gn and ignore those who think I am a numpty. It is because I am a numpty that does not trust myself not to misread gr as grams on a bad day. Not that 56 grams of any powder would actually fit into any case I have, nor have I ever put the scales on grams instead of grains, but there may a day to come where I do something even dumber than the dumb things I have done already like a fine adjustment using a fraction of a grain that does fit the case when done in grams.
On the 5.56 question:
Answer is yes so long as they are Boxer primers. NATO rounds can be Berdan primers, which are a real pain to deal with: drilling them out and swaging in a piece of 0.22LR case so they fit Boxer primers, is probably more than you wish to take on at the moment. Even getting Berdan primers out is a pain, as they have two flash holes, neither of which are central to the case.
However case capacities vary between manufacturers so ensure you check each with GRT and don't interchange them when testing your grouping. Also, different bullets of the same weight from different manufacturers often (usually) need slightly different loads.
On Boxer primers, there is not a lot of difference in Large Rifle primers. I don't know about the smaller primers.
No. Old fashioned vibratory with some kind of media and a shot of Brasso. Strictly for outdoor use and with gloves when removing cases. I left cases in the tumbler for 24-hours.wet tumbler?? very nice, i will be ordering one very soon![]()
thanksNice to see it coming together, it'll all seem less complicated now .
I'd try 22.2 and 22.8 grains of 10x with the 55grain SPT . You may be able to improve on your 22.5 grain load .
Sierra data shows 22.9 grains as max .
It'll be interesting to see how N133 compares .