Hunterjohnb
Well-Known Member
Hope your wife makes a full recovery from her illness.For you please keep a positive outlook as it will help you overcome your present difficulties.Best wishes to you both.
Hope your wife makes a full recovery from her illness.For you please keep a positive outlook as it will help you overcome your present difficulties.Best wishes to you both.
I bought a .223 case length gauge from the same guy who sold the 126 cases. It wasn't serviceable and I wasn't best pleased with how he handled this. Not much money involved but ended up spending more than if I'd bought a new one.
Sheprador, I've got a range day on 10th June - Will see if I can get hold of some once fired PPU cases.
The sale ad said they were Remington brand. Let's be polite, and say the wording was devious. SD can be a channel like any other to unload tat.
Sold: .223 Brass
You need to know how to remove primer crimps properly to avoid gas leakage. All the Lee tools are useless. Most of the once-fired .223/5.56 cases now have crimped primers, but commercial Remington brand or Rel-Com (R-P) does not. "Rem 223" headstamp is crimped, and actually Federal FCC made for Lake City.
If there's a date on the case ("WCC 99" = Winchester Cartridge Company 1999) then they are usually crimped AR15 fodder, no matter what the headstamp is.
If you need genuine Remington non-crimped once-fired I've got hundreds.
They're here for you foc if anyone can use them. Also a couple of pics to clarify Charlie-hunter's question in the ad thread. No expert. Have they been annealed?
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Maybe you should keep these cases, sort them by headstamp, and get familiar with dealing with the crimp. Think of it as a lesson in reloading.
Many really good 223 cases can be had for a song because they are once fired military. I have a couple of five-gallon buckets full that I use in my 223's. A friend uses them in his 20 Practical. I have used a small screwdriver with the edge flats stoned to cut, I have used chamfer-deburring tools, and RCBS primer pocket swage and the Dillon Super Swage 600. All got the job done with varying degrees of difficulty. ~Muir
Thanks, but I'm just a hill billy with too many guns and internet access. I do love reloading though. I've got to feed the flock, as it were...Thank you Muir. I had thought of experienenting with them...had no knowledge of primer crimps st all tbh so am learning! In this instance on reflection I think I'll pass em on to someone who knows what they're doing and start again.
Also, thank you for all your advice and input on SD. I'm new but have already benefitted loads from your past posts. Beginning to understand why you are so well respected and valued on here. Thanks![]()
I too think the seller should refund the OP!
A countersink in a drill can be used with care or the Lee chamfer tool is cheap. FC (Federal) brass is a pain but you only need to do it once.
if you're reloading to save money then don't worry about the nth degree but I generally don't mix cases for each batch.