Brass Prep For F-Open

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • Visit us on Patreon: / winninginthewind
    In this video, I show my exact brass prep process before the first firing.
    Reloading can be dangerous. Use proper, safe techniques and slow, deliberate load workups to ensure safe maximum charges are not exceeded.
    Videos on this channel are for informative, and entertainment purposes only. Using any of the information is at the risk of the individual using the information. We (including CZcams) will not be held liable for any injury or damage resulting from attempting anything shown or discussed in any of our videos. By viewing or flagging this video you are acknowledging the above.

Komentáře • 104

  • @hewlett260
    @hewlett260 Před rokem +7

    My brass prep for Lapua brass is inspect, run a mandrel, chamfer/deburr the necks and load it.

  • @hardball107
    @hardball107 Před 2 lety +11

    I'm just a weekend shooter and I reload all my ammo, I spend more time on brass prep than anything else. I make my own 6.5 Creedmoor from Federal commercial 308 brass, it's the heaviest and thickest out there even more than military. I form it, trim it, turn the necks to .015", deburr the flash holes, swage the primer pockets and because of pushing the shoulder back so far I anneal it. I shoot a basically stock Savage 12FV with a 26" heavy barrel and a Vortex 6x24x50 Tactical scope on it. I load 120gr OTM bullets for everything out to 350 yards and 140's out to 600. Right now that rifle, Tupperware stock and all will hold .3moa at 100 yards with my current loadings. I have less than $700 in that rig and I credit it's performance to my brass prep and proper maintenance. The bullets are cheap Privi Partisan OTM's ($.30 ea.) and I use IMR4350 powder. I load on a RCBS RCll with Hornady dies, nothing exotic, but even factory brass gets the full treatment.

    • @PencilProper
      @PencilProper Před měsícem

      Any reason why you load two different weight projectiles?
      Why not just stick with 140 grainers

  • @wilfdarr
    @wilfdarr Před 2 lety +10

    This is brave, sharing your "secrets" like that. Sail GP has taken this approach from the beginning: all metrics are recorded and then the teams go over the metrics together, so the boats are all performing their best, and races are very tight. A win is down to sailing alone, and a loss is down to mistakes. I'd love to see all F-class shooters commit to this direction with you, where a win is down to reading wind and weather, and a loss has only the shooter to blame.

    • @MasonStormSunny
      @MasonStormSunny Před 2 lety +7

      I think he achieved a lot in the sport and he does not need to prove anything anymore. That's why he enjoys sharing his knowledge. Other than that I think a true master is so confident in his skills that he does not care about the knowledge he keeps.

    • @oleg63204
      @oleg63204 Před rokem +1

      @@MasonStormSunny " a true master is so confident in his skills that he does not care about the knowledge he keeps." - it's golden!

  • @charlesrhea6810
    @charlesrhea6810 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for a great video. There is so much “junk” out there it’s it is hard to know what is actually works . Your approach is so common sense and “basic “ ! This is such good information, thanks for this video it was very helpful to know what I’m doing is sufficient,without getting lost in the weeds of things that does not make any real difference.👍😎

  • @donbenson5292
    @donbenson5292 Před rokem +1

    Great video... no secrets that i haven't been doing for a long time. It is like a foundation to a house. The better it is the more "sound" the structure is built upon it.

  • @pstewart5443
    @pstewart5443 Před rokem +3

    Here's my thing about brass prep. I don't believe there is an incorrect method to working on your brass so long as it is consistent and gives you the confidence in your brass to shoot it at the target and believe that the brass isn't the problem when you get weird results, i.e. odd flyers. Can you overwork it, probably. Are there steps you don't need to do, most likely. I may prep my brass or mix different firings together. I've had other guys tell me I'm crazy, but then I show up and shoot better groups than they do with a 6mm in wind while they're shooting 284s. I've done this with 284, 6.5, 6, etc. There are three big things that affect velocity and flight ballistics. Ignition, Neck Tension, and bullet bearing length. There are secondary factors like concentricity of the neck, shoulder bump consistency (which affects case volume and thus Boyle's Law of heated gas expansion as well the amount of oxygen created by the double base smokeless powder and the rate of expansion as brass differences can affect the energy loss due to brass needing to be pushed out by said gases), bullet weight inconsistency, primer compound differences/variations which can be removed by sorting primers by weight, seating depth of bullet and primer, and of course powder weight inconsistency. I'm sure there are others like amount of remnant copper fouling, last bare metal cleaning, throat erosion, trigger sear problems, weak firing pin, etc. Some of those fall within the Ignition timing and bullet bearing length categories though.
    I am not the only shooter who believes this. I've talked to several other record holders who taught me this. I offer nothing novel here.
    Keith, as usual sir you are a wealth of knowledge. I admire your habits and I learn something new EVERY TIME I tune into your channel. I struggle with severe nerve damage and joint damage in my hands so holding onto 200 cases during trimming, primer pocket uniforming (I also use a single piece uniformer), and neck turning. I've been looking for some time a method to hold onto the brass better. I will be buying several of those LE Wilson shell holders and I am definitely gonna try the neck turning method you use as I too have seen inconsistencies using tools which are cold vs warm.

  • @erasmo425
    @erasmo425 Před rokem

    I truly appreciate and share your sentiment on the topic of sharing knowledge and experience as a novice NRA F Open Class shooter. Thank you

  • @mmgee
    @mmgee Před 3 měsíci

    I did a Russian to 6PPC for 24 years back in the 80s. We only had Sako brass.

  • @robertself9125
    @robertself9125 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the tips and advice in your video. Wishing you all 10 rings.

  • @launcheddoor8605
    @launcheddoor8605 Před 2 lety +1

    I needed this video. I appreciate you taking the time to share this knowledge

  • @jeffsikula2920
    @jeffsikula2920 Před rokem

    For new cases this is my exact process i use myself. flash holes and neck turning

    • @jeffsikula2920
      @jeffsikula2920 Před rokem

      flas holes and neck turning are only done once.

  • @user-hp6qk3uv8p
    @user-hp6qk3uv8p Před 6 měsíci

    I sure appreciate your efforts. Thank you ☺️

  • @fasttimmy133
    @fasttimmy133 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing to grow the sport!

  • @jimlerum
    @jimlerum Před 2 lety

    Thanks Kieth for sharing. Good luck at nationals!

  • @charlessaville8418
    @charlessaville8418 Před rokem

    Thanks for your knowledge would have loved learned it 45 yrs ago

  • @johnpassier7783
    @johnpassier7783 Před 2 lety

    Really appreciate you doing this ; you are a "walking talking encyclopedia "......

  • @whiplash636
    @whiplash636 Před 2 lety +5

    Honestly, I'm pretty surprised by how much work you do with brand new, factory Lapua brass. I thought the biggest reason for using Lapua brass in the first place was that it's good to go?

  • @normanbeaver3780
    @normanbeaver3780 Před 2 lety +1

    TKS for sharing, i app that!

  • @AlbinGwiazda
    @AlbinGwiazda Před 2 lety

    Hi, thank you for this movie. It is very useful, greetings from Poland.

  • @tridentsix
    @tridentsix Před rokem

    Great information.

  • @mikekopmanis2099
    @mikekopmanis2099 Před rokem

    I always qualify the I/D, fire form, then brushing size the O/D to clean up the I/D with a reamer, then turn on a tight mandrel and final bushing size for 0.003" press fit. After firing, I trim if necessary and remove the donut with the reamer. This delivers uniform neck tension every time.

  • @chethaynes5802
    @chethaynes5802 Před 2 lety

    Thank You Very Much for Sharing.

  • @aaronwalser438
    @aaronwalser438 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing! A lot of good information and things that I will likely try.

  • @tommykawasaki9676
    @tommykawasaki9676 Před 2 lety +1

    Here is the plain simple deal,
    It all begins in the brass.
    The more uniform your brass is, the more uniform your pressure curve will be & thus the more uniform your velocities will be.
    THUS the more uniform you will print down range.
    The ultimate goal is predictably tight groups.
    Makes it a lot easier to set your scope up.
    Onto primers, powder & bullets …

  • @j.muckafignotti4226
    @j.muckafignotti4226 Před 2 lety

    Yes, especially Lapua .284 brass at almost $2 a pop! Nice presentation!

  • @jaybigboy34
    @jaybigboy34 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the information!

  • @PBVader
    @PBVader Před rokem

    If you're reaming the flash hole with the primer pocket, might as well chamfer the flash holes evenly from the inside. Some goofball is grifting a primer seater using the extractor lip as a datum. SAAMI says otherwise, with 8 to 12 thou variance.

  • @JiuJitsuCurriculum
    @JiuJitsuCurriculum Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @calebmartinez3805
    @calebmartinez3805 Před 2 lety

    Man I was thinking that you really pull the plug from channel,am glad is not the case! I really learned a lot and fixed a lot of wrong doing in my reloading ( I really do believe is science) and open mind who want to learn when making good accurate ammo!

  • @CHenry1951
    @CHenry1951 Před 2 lety

    Thanks, some good information...........................

  • @gordoncouger9648
    @gordoncouger9648 Před rokem

    I always sort mine into 2 or 3 groups based on weight. Then check the extremes to see if there is any difference in case capacity, length, etc. I keep them segregated in those groups so I can weigh loaded rounds and check for errors more confidently.

  • @aaronarcher2356
    @aaronarcher2356 Před 2 lety

    I'm similar. Alot of my steps are probably unnecessary but help me sleep at night kinda thing.

  • @TexasTrained
    @TexasTrained Před rokem

    Keith, I doall that except Neck turning.Ive never had a donut .Yes we all need to teach the next bunch of new shooters.If we are that worried about them beating us with our own methods..Chance is they would beat us anyway.Maybe not as soon..But they would later.Great Video.

  • @georgepettit9208
    @georgepettit9208 Před 2 lety

    Thanks

  • @maxcoatlhunter4322
    @maxcoatlhunter4322 Před 2 lety +2

    Reloading is so confusing at times.....

  • @wayneschenk5512
    @wayneschenk5512 Před 2 lety

    Everyone learns that must be a good thing.

  • @francoisdavel1786
    @francoisdavel1786 Před rokem

    Hi Keith. Thank you for sharing your methods. Can I ask you a huge favour? I don't understand how you prepare the inside of the neck before you seat a bullet. Would you kindly demonstrate what you do? I have tried graphite but it is inconsistent and increases ES.

  • @MMBRM
    @MMBRM Před 2 lety +2

    Just a question regarding primer pocket uniforming. Have you measured the pockets on newer lots of lapua brass before uniforming them? I've found that there's no real need to uniform them as the ~500 that've I've measured in the last few years have not varied by more than ~0.001" and given that primers themselves vary more than that in overall thickness I'm not sure how much value there can be in uniforming the pockets. I suppose that it could simply be a "just in case" measure which is fine.

  • @jorgefigueroa7573
    @jorgefigueroa7573 Před rokem

    Just curious, you neck turn the new brass after you expand it with a mandrel. So is your mandrel slightly over sized from you neck caliber? Giving your neck the similarity of a fired brass?? I ask because if I use a new brass un-fired and run the normal size mandrel to expand it. It does not expand it. I barely feel it make contact or touch the neck walls at all. Unless of course I size it with a collet die and later expand it back with the mandrel.

  • @ewetho
    @ewetho Před 2 lety +1

    Nice video, not shooting to your level so I will anneal and maybe use a mandrel to expand my necks… most my bottle necks are closing in on 1/2moa sometimes less. Happy enough but value the insight of others doing more. I have done more and done better but Lapua Brass seems to be as good or better than me… That said did just order some Winchester brass for 243 hunting ammo I am sure I will break out some of those tools again!

  • @longrange1114
    @longrange1114 Před rokem

    I see where you swap your barrel without removing your scope and the action still in the stock. How tight do you torque your barrels?

  • @hunterman1309
    @hunterman1309 Před rokem

    Hey Keith, can you tell me , which size flash hole uniformer do you use . 0.059'' or 0.062''

  • @DocJustinT
    @DocJustinT Před 2 lety

    I shoot service rifle matches and my brass prep is the same as yours except I don't turn my necks. Maybe I should, but I'm not sure if it would be worth it.

  • @northernsky6117
    @northernsky6117 Před rokem

    Do you clean used brass or clean primer pockets ?

  • @petermarum2364
    @petermarum2364 Před 2 lety +1

    I have cancelled sub. We here in Aust are not that keen on handing over identifying info to youtube(who knows where it ends up) to watch something as plain as brass prep. CZcams can take a running jump

  • @johnh4957
    @johnh4957 Před 2 lety

    Referring to previous vid, does age restriction de-monetize you now? I love your channel but hadn't done Patreon before but just did to show/give support to what I think is about the best content I've seen. I truly want you to 'Keep up the good Work!'

  • @stephenthompson9722
    @stephenthompson9722 Před 2 lety

    I'm just an amateurs target shooter. Recently purchased a box of 308 palma match lapua brass. I ain't doing anything to it. My rifle barrel and action. Trigger. Rest and me won't get any benefit from doing any fancy brass prep. Plus it's more tools I'll need to spend money on that could have gone into bullets and powder.

  • @lemonaid1605
    @lemonaid1605 Před 2 lety

    I think it would benefit your viewers to include what extra steps you would do for non premium brass. LC brass for example. Lapua has done a lot of the extra steps such as case mouth chamfer.

    • @davecollins6113
      @davecollins6113 Před 2 lety +1

      His trimmer has a 3 in 1 cutter on it, trims and chamfers inside & out.

  • @jd2757
    @jd2757 Před 2 lety

    For standard chambers that do not require neck turn before first firing, do you recommend turning before fireforming, after fireforming or not at all? I use a mandrel for final neck sizing, so not sure turning will have much benefit. As a 223 FTR shooter I need every hint I can get... thanks for the top-secret dope!!

  • @thomasjansson2019
    @thomasjansson2019 Před 2 lety

    Goodie 🤩👍

  • @beauderoy7745
    @beauderoy7745 Před rokem

    Keith, when fireforming virgin brass is it necessary to seat the bullet into the lands to prevent the case from overstretching?

  • @juliusjames5577
    @juliusjames5577 Před 2 lety

    I’m surprised you uniform primer pocket. I just watched your video where you stated exact primer depth seating didn’t make a difference. Is this a hold over habit or what am I missing?

  • @stevehigdon326
    @stevehigdon326 Před rokem

    If I may ask a question. What neck thickness do you trim too? What variation in neck wall thickness do you see, and range do you find acceptable?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před rokem

      Thickness is determined bv the chamber neck diameter. I turn to gain a .004" clearance. My turning shows a neck wall variation of .0003" maximum. Typically, I can hold .0002" for almost all cases, but one always slips though to increase it another 1/10,000". I haven't found that neck wall thickness is as sensitive as some may believe. I shoot several no-turn chambers in other cartridges that don't seem to care if I turn necks of not.

  • @greasegun1313
    @greasegun1313 Před 2 lety

    Are you fire forming to 284 shehane or what chamber? Do you use starting loads, warm or hot loads for this step? Can you take anything away from the shooting you do during fire forming?

  • @lockechip
    @lockechip Před 2 lety

    Hi, thanks, what is your opinion on chamfering the inside of the pilot hole?

  • @tacitus7408
    @tacitus7408 Před rokem

    What brand and where to buy drill-press shell holder and neck turner?

  • @gruntardo7519
    @gruntardo7519 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing, one quick question, I presume you have expanded the brass to the mandrel size (neck tension) you need and hence don't need to size back down again.

  • @garydaddario6377
    @garydaddario6377 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the great vids. Keep them coming. One question that's got me stumped. I have both the 284 winchester and the 6.5x284 norma rifles. Lapua brass is available in both calibers. Why do some form 284 winchester from 6.5x284 brass? Could it be for neck wall thickness? Thanks

    • @lachlanmcgovern3104
      @lachlanmcgovern3104 Před 2 lety

      That’s purely out of necessity. Lapua didn’t used to make 284 brass, but they made 6.5 brass, hence a lot of people preferring to neck up the better quality Lapua brass

  • @stephenkrampert3430
    @stephenkrampert3430 Před rokem

    I usually start with a light chamfer inside and out, even if case mouths aren’t perfectly round, then expand seeing that there is sometimes a flare or lip on the case mouth, not wanting to transfer that through when using the expander What is your opinion?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před rokem

      I wouldn't chamfer out of round necks. The tools are designed to work on perfectly round necks. I just run the expander through them if I get them out of round. It seems to work well for me.

    • @stephenkrampert3430
      @stephenkrampert3430 Před rokem

      @@winninginthewind OK thank you

  • @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo
    @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo Před 5 měsíci

    I don’t get the Sinclair flash hole tool. I already use a Sinclair flash hole deburring tool on the _inside_ of the case, the first time only with new brass. How is this different?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před 5 měsíci +1

      You can ream from either end, but getting consistent hole diameters seems to make a very small improvement in performance.

    • @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo
      @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo Před 4 měsíci

      @@winninginthewind​​⁠Thanks very much for clarifying. Learn something new every day, I hadn’t seen that particular tool before. I do already uniform the primer pockets with that excellent Sinclair carbide tool. Just getting into reloading for precision rifle so appreciate your knowledge. 👍

  • @grantjamrock3812
    @grantjamrock3812 Před 2 lety

    Lately ive been seeing people claiming primer pocket uniformity ruins the brass and "crush" the firing pin puts on the primer for consistent ignition. Primarily in Erik C video with Primal Rights primer seater. Whats your opinion on said matter?

    • @tommykawasaki9676
      @tommykawasaki9676 Před 2 lety

      Interesting.
      Something has made Erik observe that. He wouldn’t say it otherwise.
      But I sure would be skeptical of the tool he is using.
      I have uniformed my pockets for 36 years & I have never witnessed such a thing. Clearly Erik has.
      (I’m sorry, I have no idea what tools I’m using. My Dad gave them to me years ago. I think it’s a Lyman.)

  • @toddb930
    @toddb930 Před 2 lety

    Does your brass length trimmer go off the shoulder? If so, is the case base to shoulder dimension that consistent on new Lapua brass?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před 2 lety

      Yes, off the shoulder. I didn't even bother measuring the other way as it doesn't have any usefulness for neck turning.

  • @davidstuck2866
    @davidstuck2866 Před 2 lety

    I don't understand how you referenced the shoulder datum.

  • @wernerprinsloo8309
    @wernerprinsloo8309 Před 2 lety

    You expand with a 283. What size mandrel do you use in your neck cutter.

  • @Tomthormeyer
    @Tomthormeyer Před 2 lety

    Good job Keith. but here’s a question will you share your reamer print?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před 2 lety

      with CZcams? Nope!

    • @Tomthormeyer
      @Tomthormeyer Před 2 lety

      @@winninginthewind want my email address?

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před 2 lety

      Explain this to me. How do I recoup R&D cost that way?

    • @Tomthormeyer
      @Tomthormeyer Před 2 lety

      @@winninginthewind easy there grasshopper! Lol.
      You said you were gonna tell everything. I shoot a .284 in steel target competitions. And I’m fixing to buy a lathe and start building my own guns so I thought I’d ask. Doesn’t hurt to ask does it?

  • @grantbrittain2774
    @grantbrittain2774 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing ... is their a benefit to turning virgin brass vs once fired ?

    • @lachlanmcgovern3104
      @lachlanmcgovern3104 Před 2 lety +1

      A lot of F class shooters’ chambers have tight necks where an unturned neck, will not fit in the chamber. I suspect that’s the case for Keith.

    • @winninginthewind
      @winninginthewind  Před 2 lety +2

      Correct, out of the box brass won't chamber for this barrel.

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Před 2 lety +4

      Even if your brass chambers, you should turn the neck before shooting it the first time. The more uneven it is, the more unevenly it will stretch: think of a balloon, where the thinnest part stretches first before the thick part, so the thick part stays thick while the thin part gets even thinner. Ensuring your brass is uniform thickness will ensure that it stretches (and sizes) uniformly and will greatly extend the life of your brass.

  • @badoldboy5557
    @badoldboy5557 Před 2 lety

    👌☝

  • @lachlanmcgovern3104
    @lachlanmcgovern3104 Před 2 lety

    Hey Keith, I’ve heard from a few F class channels, Cortina’s for example, that he doesn’t touch the primer pockets because it’s easy to mess up and isn’t worth the risk with the minimal gains it may or may not bring. With that said, how do you seat your primers? And would you seat them in a different manner if you used virgin uncut pockets?

    • @buick4622
      @buick4622 Před 2 lety +1

      I find this funny because he has that expensive primal rights priming tool, but doesn't true up the pockets. So how do you get an accurate seating depth then?

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Před 2 lety

      @@buick4622 His argument is that there's no good datum to reference off of without some very dedicated equipment: equipment the case manufacturers have that few to no reloaders have. In theory a good quality manufacturer with the tools they have should get tighter tolerances than we'll ever get with some hand held jobber, emphasis on good quality manufacturers.
      For this point especially, I'm in the "do it if you think it helps, don't if you don't" camp!

    • @buick4622
      @buick4622 Před 2 lety

      @@wilfdarr accuracy one makes a primer pocket depth gauge. It's not expensive. Cortina also said uniforming ruins brass. It doesn't ruin brass. If it did NOBODY would do it.

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Před 2 lety +1

      @@buick4622 Yes they do, but just like every other home remedy, it references off the base of the case rather than the rim, which isn't the best way to do it. If you've got expensive brass, you're not going to improve it's consistency with hand held tools! All you're looking to do when reloading is customize it to your rifle, and the less you have to do to accommodate your rifle, the better off you'll be.

    • @northernsky6117
      @northernsky6117 Před 2 lety +2

      I do nothing to new Lapua brass other than prime it.

  • @luvtahandload7692
    @luvtahandload7692 Před 2 lety

    Wow, way to ruin perfectly fine Lapua brass. 😳

  • @pennerblogger
    @pennerblogger Před 2 lety

    Oh wow CZcams giving me a warning that this video is for adults....

    • @edwardabrams4972
      @edwardabrams4972 Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t know where your located but I live in the USA and it didn’t give me a warning so maybe out of the country only?

    • @davecollins6113
      @davecollins6113 Před 2 lety

      You can desecelect the warnings, it's takes the controls off your computer for things like porn warnings as well..

    • @pennerblogger
      @pennerblogger Před 2 lety

      @@edwardabrams4972 Germany.