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JLarsson

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Posts posted by JLarsson

  1. OK. Further investigation revealed that the chute was not opening at all and getting stuck in the closed position. I followed one of the suggestions and put a magnet on the chute which made it open every time I lowered the lever. However, after a while the magnet would move and then I'd have to reposition it to make it work again.

    I will buy some super glue tomorrow and permanently affix the magnet (I guess any kind of weight would do in reality) so the chute would be top heavy enough to open every time I lower the lever. I m surprised it does not come from the factory that way.

    If the chute is sticking, make sure you replace the hinge pin with a piece of paperclip or safety pin or one of the other fine suggestions given here. It should move freely, with or without a weight.

  2. wow, I just bought a XL650 in 2015, about 4 yrs to the date of your post. I wish I would have found this forum before my purchase. I have been so frustrated that I have given up on reloading. I often tell people to stay away from Dillon and go with a single stage. If anyone is interested in buying a Dillon XL650 I will sell you this one cheap. I need the space for anything that won't make my hair fall out.

    TROLL?

    Dunno. I PM'd him, though. :D

  3. well.. shit?! I orderd a gsi feeder 6 weeks, and it hasnt been shipped yet, guess I need to tell them have the mark7.

    but I want to use it both *with* mark7 and without, when I load 9 major, I dont bell the brass, hence the need for seating on upstroke.. hence GSI

    I have 6 x 1050's and move the mark7 around at times, for loading large batches, then smaller batches by hand.

    will this gsi work both WITH and WITHOUT the mark7 baseplate?

    Holy. Cow. :surprise:

  4. I realize the OP was asking about trimming 9mm. And barring cases that are too long to chamber properly, no, there isn't a need to trim them.

    I was trying to point out that there are SOME circumstances in which trimming of SOME handgun cases is desirable or even necessary. One I forgot to mention was when using a roll crimp with cast bullets. Cases that are too long to be crimped properly into the crimp groove will shave and/or deform the forward driving band. Not MY idea of a good thing.

    But that's just my opinion. You're certainly welcome to think otherwise if you wish.

  5. Well.....I guess I'll be the voice of dissent. :)

    For taper-crimped cartridges, minor variations in case length isn't too big a deal. These cartridges DO headspace on the case mouth, so if the cases were too long for some reason, that might create an issue for chambering. On the other hand, if they are too short, it could create an issue with ignition.

    ROLL-CRIMPED cartridges, on the other hand, should be pretty darn close to each other for consistency of crimp, and especially so if seating and crimping in the same operation. These cartridges, .357 Mag, .44 Mag, etc. typically headspace via the rim, so chambering and ignition aren't usually a problem (though a too-long case COULD present issues of chambering). It isn't necessary that all the cases match some arbitrary measurement as much as they match each other. If new, out-of-the-box cases vary too much in length, trimming for uniformity may be necessary. One additional benefit is with a roll-crimp, more uniformity results in better long-range accuracy, if the gun and shooter are capable.

  6. I called DIllon on Thursday and discussed having my Square deal B refurbished. The CSR gave me an RMA number to place on the shipment and on the enclosed letter. the RMA Number has the order information for their records. He told me there was approx 5-6 turnaround on the rebuilds at this time.

    I shipped that afternoon. I went UPS ground and the shipping was an additional $43 bucks to the $75 refurbish charge.

    5-6.....weeks?

  7. For your needs, the Pact electronic scale and powder dispenser combo would do well. I have one of the original (slower) models, but they are supposed to have speeded things up a bit since then. Mine works for exactly the purpose you mention - 100 rifle rounds once or twice a month, and it would do well for more than that. They are separate units, and the electronic scale works well in standalone mode also.

  8. I put mine in Station #3 and removed the pin. I run a standard sizing/decapping die in Station #1. I use a casefeeder on my 550, ... my loading toolhead has Station #1 empty - just prime there.

    I'm confused. You mean you run all your cases through once just to size and deprime, and then you run them all through again to prime, charge, seat, and crimp?

    It's a 550 (4 stations) not a 1050.

    Run through to size/deprime/trim

    Tumble (they were lubed for sizing)

    Swage on Super 600

    Run through to prime/charge/seat/crimp.

    Guys with 650's do more or less the same.

    Thanks for clarifying. It wasn't originally clear to me that you were talking about two separate tool heads. I think I've got it now. :)

  9. I put mine in Station #3 and removed the pin. I run a standard sizing/decapping die in Station #1. I use a casefeeder on my 550, ... my loading toolhead has Station #1 empty - just prime there.

    I'm confused. You mean you run all your cases through once just to size and deprime, and then you run them all through again to prime, charge, seat, and crimp?

  10. I don't use one shot, even Hornady does not recommend it for rifle brass because of the possible stuck case in a full length die. I use a lanolin based lube (Dillon) and tumble after sizing and trimming. All the trim swarf comes out of the cases then...

    jj

    Got a source for this? Nothing like that on their website that I can find.

    Called and asked them. Plus there are many posts here supporting it. Why use a lube that is known to cause stuck cases when a lanolin based lube does not?

    jj

    The reason I ask is that I've used One Shot for years and I don't know how many rifle cases and never had that problem. Thanks.

  11. I don't use one shot, even Hornady does not recommend it for rifle brass because of the possible stuck case in a full length die. I use a lanolin based lube (Dillon) and tumble after sizing and trimming. All the trim swarf comes out of the cases then...

    jj

    Got a source for this? Nothing like that on their website that I can find.

  12. Mine has never failed to deprime but I suppose it is possible.

    Glad you haven't had the problem yet, but it is much more than possible -

    happens quite a bit. Have to keep an eye out for it. :surprise:

    I check my primers when I reload my mags - make sure the primer is there,

    not too tall, and definitely not already dimpled (fired). :cheers:

    Maybe I'm lucky. I haven't kept records and don't load and shoot quite as much as some do. But a pretty good number of rounds have come out of my SDB.

    The primer problems that I've encountered have been failures to feed new primers when switching to another caliber. There was a time when I was making do with one primer slide for 3 calibers, and needed to adjust everything when switching. Also, the case needs to be pretty accurately in place at the priming station. At some stage, I decided that it is better to leave the tab off the pin that holds the case in the shell plate.

    My pins didn't come with tabs. Is this something you made yourself? Got pix?

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