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Lee BULGE BUSTER


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It works. Pain in the ass, but works just fine. Bit of technique involved. Use One-Shot. Start the mouth of the case in the die, not

on the push pin. A small tap with the push pin to get things going before the final push. Sort of like starting a finish nail. The plastic case

catcher is in the $h!t can. Though things did appeared kind of weird and redish when you looked through it. :huh:

Handles a small operation like mine(~300 rounds a week). Not to interested in doing any more with it.

Brass runs through the Dillon sizer/de-primer beautifully. Gauges perfect.

Jim

Edited by Jman
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I'm lost ............... what are you doing? :huh:

:) It's just a way of removing the bulge on Glocked brass. Similar to the Redding GRX Push Thru Base Sizing Die.

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Why not just put the cap back on the LEE FCD and use it like it was designed. I put one in my 650 in the very last station and it's been working fine for me for the last few years. I think it was $12 from Midway or something like that.

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Why not just put the cap back on the LEE FCD and use it like it was designed. I put one in my 650 in the very last station and it's been working fine for me for the last few years. I think it was $12 from Midway or something like that.

Lee Precision came up with an additional, clever use for the FCD body only. Not being used as a crimp die at all. Sort of a poor mans Case Pro.

Jim

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In close to 15 years of loading glocked .40 brass I haven't found one case that couldn't be resized down properly with my standard Lee 40/10mm sizing die. With the standard $16 die screwed down all the way to the shellplate and a quarter turn extra it will resize the worst cases so I can put them in a case gauge both front and backwards. Just something cheaper to try....

DougC

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My experience is than same Doug, and then some. Recently went to a fully progressive press and found that my Lee re-sizer/decappers were not very compatible. Last December I had a case head separation in my G35. No likely. Since then have re-doubled my case inspection efforts. While doing so I run my cases through the new Lee kit before they make it to the case feeder. Makes for a very smooth loading process. I'm all about smooth. ;)

Anyway #27,683 in ways to skin a cat. :cheers:

Jim

Edited by Jman
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Good morning, guys,

I've been loading Glock-shot 40 S&W on a Dillon using RCBS dies for sizing and bullet seating but I've used the Lee Factory Crimp die at the last station. Roughly 20% won't drop into a Wilson case gage reliably. However, they drop into a Lone Wolf barrel fine. They shoot fine in the Glock barrel (no surprise there), but I haven't shot the Lone Wolf barrel yet, so take what I've said with a grain of salt. As soon as the range opens back up (too much snow on the road), I'll give a bit better feedback.

All my best,

Rob

Edited by RobfromME
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My setup:

Station 1 - Hornady resize die

Station 2 - EGW U-die

Station 5 - Hornady taper crimp die

This fixes nearly all brass (say 1% won't won't chamber check due to burrs on extractor rim), as long as there isn't any "junk brass" in there. Some headstamps (S&B, GFL, A-MERC, nny and others) just want to give problems. Sometimes 30-50% of those won't chamber check in the 2011 no matter what I do. If I know there is a large quantity of those headstamps in a lot I am using I will sort them out by hand.

It doesn't seem to matter if the "good" headstamps were shot through a Glock or not, they all chamber check fine after running em through the press.

I'm almost positive that that all of the rounds I set aside would shoot through a Glock chamber (and some will shoot through the 2011, but others will stop it up). Unfortunately they are loaded too long for a .40 S&W Glock (1.190"). Seating them back to 1.135" would put them well over max pressure for 40.

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Sure wish one was available for 9mm. I have to pitch 80% of the brass I collect at my club as it bulges when I resize. I guess the 9mm cartridge might be too tapered for a solution.

The Lee Undersize die gets rid of the bulge on the 9mm completely but it makes the press "stick" a little on the upward pull of the handle.

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Yeah, but that says:

Do not use the Bulge Buster Kit to reload for the

40 S&W Glock or similar guns with chambers that

do not fully support the cartridge due to the

intrusion of the feed ramp.

:huh:

Most (if not all) gun makers warn against the use of reloads. Lee is being prudent.

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Yeah, but that says:

Do not use the Bulge Buster Kit to reload for the

40 S&W Glock or similar guns with chambers that

do not fully support the cartridge due to the

intrusion of the feed ramp.

:huh:

Most (if not all) gun makers warn against the use of reloads. Lee is being prudent.

OK, I couldn't let this one pass. I understand that a gun manufacturer would warn against using reloads in their firearms. Obviously, they don't want to be held responsible for someone else's stupidity. However, don't you find it odd that a manufacturer of reloading equipment would recommend that you don't reload? I'm just askin'... :roflol:

Edited by WatchmanUSA
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Yeah, but that says:

Do not use the Bulge Buster Kit to reload for the

40 S&W Glock or similar guns with chambers that

do not fully support the cartridge due to the

intrusion of the feed ramp.

:huh:

Most (if not all) gun makers warn against the use of reloads. Lee is being prudent.

OK, I couldn't let this one pass. I understand that a gun manufacturer would warn against using reloads in their firearms. Obviously, they don't want to be held responsible for someone else's stupidity. However, don't you find it odd that a manufacturer of reloading equipment would recommend that you don't reload? I'm just askin'... :roflol:

Can't remember who or where but I've seen other reloading sources specifically recommend against reloading for Glock .40's. Maybe my Lyman manual?

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don't you find it odd that a manufacturer of reloading equipment would recommend that you don't reload? I'm just askin'

Definitely a strange disclaimer. Sign of the times I suppose.

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