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RichJacot

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Posts posted by RichJacot

  1. I did take a few minutes to check the issue Rick mentions below and it appears to be the issue I'm having.

    I'm going to stop by Home Depot and see if I can find a long Dremel bit and shave a bit off the brass lip. If I can find the right bit it should be a fairly quick/easy fix.

    From Rick:

    If it appears that the projectiles are getting caught / stuck in the vicinity of the bottom of the clear tube,

    chances are that the clear tube may be mis-aligned with the through hole in the brass weight. This jam is

    most likely to happen if you use flat based projectiles vs boat tails. Boat tails will most likely miss the exposed

    edge of the through hole.

    You might try removing the setscrew on the brass weight and lifting the switch section from the lower dropper die.

    That way you can look through the bore and see if perhaps there is a crescent section of the brass hole that could possibly be

    encroaching on the bore of the clear tube and presenting a place for the base of a projectile to be caught and stuck.

    Here is a photo of what it might look like (note: flat base projectiles). If this is the issue, you might try drilling the hole in the brass weight a little bit larger...4

    or if you can remove the plastic tube, re-glue it when aligned more accurately.

    If you don’t feel that you want to fix it yourself, contact the dealer you purchased from and get it replaced.

    If it turns out that this is NOT the cause of your problem, please let me know and perhaps we can speak about it on the phone.

    image001_zpsdg63ypl4.jpg

    Thank you Rick!!!!!

  2. I have a Mr. Bullet feeder on my 1050. I've been using it for 9mm and it's been working great. I recently purchased the .223 conversion and it's not been working so great. ;)

    Every so often the bullets will catch in the drop tube. By every so often I mean like every 10 or 20 rounds. They appear to be catching somewhere below the clear tube portion.

    I originally thought they were catching because I didn't have it set properly but after watching it more closely here's what's happening.

    I'll cycle the press and it will drop the bullet properly but the bullets above the one that just dropped won't fall. They appear to be catching on something. If just give the drop tube a slight tap, they drop that one bullet length as they should.

    I've adjusted the drop die down and down and it doesn't help. Has anyone had this issue or an idea of what the issue might be?

    Thank you!

    BTW I'm using Hornady 55gr SP

  3. When I come across a crimped brass (90%+ 9mm) I can get nearly all of them to seat. Out of 500 round loading session (I only have 5SP primer tubes) I only have 1 maybe 2 that I cannot get to seat by feel. Once you use it more you should be able to feel it and finess it in. On occasion I need to spin the brass a 1/4 to 1/2 a turn and press again. Once or twice and it's seated. At least this is my experience. Be patient and Good Luck!

    I did basically this same thing when I had my 650. After a while, though, it was easier to just pull the brass when I got resistance and keep going.

    I will say that the 1050 is worth the cost. I thought the 650 was easy until I got the 1050.

    Of that 500 round session I might toss one maybe two into the scrap bucket.

  4. When I come across a crimped brass (90%+ 9mm) I can get nearly all of them to seat. Out of 500 round loading session (I only have 5SP primer tubes) I only have 1 maybe 2 that I cannot get to seat by feel. Once you use it more you should be able to feel it and finess it in. On occasion I need to spin the brass a 1/4 to 1/2 a turn and press again. Once or twice and it's seated. At least this is my experience. Be patient and Good Luck!

  5. I have an MBF on my 1050 and a GSI on my 650. To be fair I only have a few thousand rounds through the 1050 with the MBF and 10's of thousands through the GSI but I really like the GSI. The reason I went with the GSI initially is because I didn't want to loose the powder check station and still wanted to keep seat and crimp as separate operations and GSI was the only choice. I know GSI cost is more but once I got the correct ring I have not had a single bullet tipped the wrong way or misfeed. It's literately been 100%.

    Now that I have both... I'd have to weigh how many calibers on each machine I need to load and then decide which one I'd get again. One caliber, GSI. Two calibers, tougher call. More than 2, MBF.

    Just my .02.

  6. Sorry. No I don't plan on tumbling it that long. It will be on a two hour timer and then set idle until I get home.

    I see you mention it to: "I rinse it immediately" and that's all I really find in searches. I'm just wondering what it will hurt if sit for X length of time. Will it just get sediment on it? If that's the case can't I just kick the time back on for say 15 minutes to knock that off and stir everything back up?

  7. I've just started wet tumbling. I made my own similar to Dawg's design.

    Anyway, my question is how long can I leave my brass in the tumbler?

    I've read not to leave it in the tumble when the cycle completes but other than that I haven't seen a time limit.

    I'd like to start a batch when I leave for work, about 6am, and take it out when I get home, about 6pm. Is that too long?

    I'm using a .45 full of Lemishine and a squirt of dawn with hot water in a 6" tube 19" long.

  8. A good cleaning never hurts but is the motor actually stopping or is the clutch just slipping? If the clutch is slipping you can obviously just tighten it a bit.

    I have mine set where it starts slipping when I dump too many cases in. I could tighten it more but there no sense straining the motor, it's over 20 yrs old and still going strong.

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