crimping

huntsd

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Jun 20, 2020
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can someone school me on crimping. I have a lee factory crimp die. I have a 6.5cm load that shoots very well, but want to mess around with a crimp to see if that does anything. Is there a way to tell how much crimp is applied?

I crimped 3 rounds last night, I can see a "little" crimp on the neck. Not really sure what to do if I want more or less crimp besides slightly adjust die up or down. Is there a more scientific way to go about this?
 
Joined
Dec 23, 2020
Messages
421
can someone school me on crimping. I have a lee factory crimp die. I have a 6.5cm load that shoots very well, but want to mess around with a crimp to see if that does anything. Is there a way to tell how much crimp is applied?

I crimped 3 rounds last night, I can see a "little" crimp on the neck. Not really sure what to do if I want more or less crimp besides slightly adjust die up or down. Is there a more scientific way to go about this?
If the bullet has a cannelure, then you crimp on that. If the bullet has no cannelure, than the crimp will be less pronounced as the crimping tool is essentially pushing the case neck into the jacket of the bullet.

Having said all that, I only crimp heavy bullets in rifles that generate a lot of recoil - eg a dangerous game cartridges where the bullet is at risk of moving under recoil. For a cartridge such as a 6.5 Creed, I think crimping serves no purpose, and may be detrimental to accuracy.
 
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huntsd

huntsd

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Jun 20, 2020
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664
If the bullet has a cannelure, then you crimp on that. If the bullet has no cannelure, than the crimp will be less pronounced as the crimping tool is essentially pushing the case neck into the jacket of the bullet.

Having said all that, I only crimp heavy bullets in rifles that generate a lot of recoil - eg a dangerous game cartridges where the bullet is at risk of moving under recoil. For a cartridge such as a 6.5 Creed, I think crimping serves no purpose, and may be detrimental to accuracy.
thanks for the response. Yes these bullets have no cannelure.

I was under the impression crimping could be used to help "tune" a load.
 

Truck24hr

Lil-Rokslider
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Jul 11, 2021
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197
thanks for the response. Yes these bullets have no cannelure.

I was under the impression crimping could be used to help "tune" a load.
I use bushing dies, so no crimp at all. I've pulled bullets where the crimp in the bullet varied onneach one, but all were loaded on the same equipment, so..

Leads me to think crimps could cause accuracy issues. But, i only load precision rounds, so. Plinking ammo I just buy
 
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huntsd

huntsd

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I am using hammer bullets and high quality brass/ primers ect.. the load shoots well as is, just seeing if i can milk a little more accuracy from it with the components I have
 

Choupique

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Oct 2, 2022
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With the lee FCD, the crimp is done via collet. You can really crimp the ever living hell out of rounds if you chose to, vs roll crimping where you'll destroy the case if you overdo it.

I use lee factory crimp dies for everything and crimp them pretty hard. I still have issues with bullet setback in stuff with lots of recoil.
 

Wapiti1

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Crimping will likely not improve accuracy, or consistency and will probably be detrimental. It adds a variable that is dependent on case neck thickness, case length, bullet diameter and crimp groove diameter. Two you can control with extra steps, but two you can't do anything about.

I find crimping useful for two things: bullet security, and ignition consistency with magnum ball powders in revolvers. You do it to prevent setback or forward creep of bullets under recoil. For a revolver, the crimp helps build pressure in the case and start the burn if you will. With powders like H110 and heavy charges you can get incomplete ignition without a hard crimp. Even with mag primers. Compressed charges make it worse.

Just my take. I crimp my big bore ammo and my revolver/pistol ammo. Normal stuff I don't crimp and have never seen a need to.

Jeremy
 
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Crimping will likely not improve accuracy, or consistency and will probably be detrimental. It adds a variable that is dependent on case neck thickness, case length, bullet diameter and crimp groove diameter.
That is true of traditional seating dies that incorporate a roll crimp, but not so the Lee crimper.
I think using this crimper is an aid to accuracy in some instances, particularly when used in conjunction with the collet neck die

To the OP, set the die to touch the shellholder plus 1/4 turn, if the collet closes fully, back it off a touch, you don’t need a hell of a lot.
I think it does make a difference, particularly once the brass gets useda couple of times and mixed numbers of firings
 
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