BRTreedogs
WKR
The only way I can see there would be a difference then is if your seating stem is pressing on the tips rather then the ogive.I am measuring to the ogive.
The ogive should be very consistent.
The only way I can see there would be a difference then is if your seating stem is pressing on the tips rather then the ogive.I am measuring to the ogive.
The only way I can see there would be a difference then is if your seating stem is pressing on the tips rather then the ogive.
The ogive should be very consistent.
Do you have an explanation to why your bullet seating depth varies then? That is the entire purpose of measuring cbto to the ogive.I don’t have a seater that pushes on the tip of the bullet.
Do you have an explanation to why your bullet seating depth varies then? That is the entire purpose of measuring cbto to the ogive.
The diameter of the tool doesn't change. So that means it measures every bullet in the same spot.
The CBTO, shoulder bump have been exact and consistent on the Lee Classic Turret.....I don’t think the seating micrometer that I use will fit under the handle on the Co-AX. I am finding out that there are other dies that won’t fit the o-ax But don’t know why. Changing turrets is more precise than changing dies in the Co-AX, one would think.The co-ax is the only press I've eyed in 22yrs while using my Lee 4 hole turret press. I can't come to grips with it being better for the prices they extort folks on that co-ax.
Lee has the Breech lock sleeve for the Rock Chucker. Don’t know if there is a preference though.I use the Hornady Lock N Load bushings in a Rockchucker press. Set the die’s up once, and leave them alone.
There’s so much truth to this. Set them up correctly once and they’re done. No bushings. Just lock rings.I must be doing something wrong with my Rock Chucker, cause I’m not fiddling with my dies near as much as it sounds like some of y’all are.
I started with a Lee Turret 35 years ago. Switched to the Co-ax about 20 years ago for all my rifle loads and never looked back. I still use the Lee for my pistol loads but not any precision rifle loads.The co-ax is the only press I've eyed in 22yrs while using my Lee 4 hole turret press. I can't come to grips with it being better for the prices they extort folks on that co-ax.
...and I had just about convinced myself I wouldn't get a co-ax, !I started with a Lee Turret 35 years ago. Switched to the Co-ax about 20 years ago for all my rifle loads and never looked back. I still use the Lee for my pistol loads but not any precision rifle loads.
Give it a try and I’m sure you won’t be disappointed. I found mine on EBay for about half the price of new....and I had just about convinced myself I wouldn't get a co-ax, !
Right on, thanks!I went from a Rock Chucker to a Co Ax 15 years ago. Not scientific but I felt my loads from the Forster were more accurate off the bench and gave the Rock Chucker to a nephew. I like the universal shell holder and prefer to slide my dies in and out vs screwing them in and out of the press when I changed dies. I think it's more consistent and repeatable.
I saw a comparison somewhere a few years ago where a guy measured run out from several major reloading presses including a Forster and if I am remembering correctly the RCBS Summit produced the most consistent ammo of the presses he tested.
For me it is not so mutch the threading and un threading of the die.If one measured the time it took to screw in a die and change a shell holder and the time it took to get a new Co-ax setup on bench and familiarized with.. How many die changes could be made? Seems like it would take a number of years for it to add up to an actual time savings.
I guess for guys who load 20 rounds of this, and 20 rounds of that, and 10 rounds of something else, I could see the convenience.
What are you measuring with?For me it is not so mutch the threading and un threading of the die.
Its the exact torque on the die.
Measuring shoulder bump .002 and cbto to heck I want them exactly the same.
So idk that it actually makes a Measurable difference.
But what I'm looking for is to be able to set my dies once, then believe I have a system consistent enough I don't have to Measure or make adjustments ever again.