That is one cool little saw, I think I might need to get me one. Also, that has got to be the quickest easiest way to trim off a lot of brass I have ever seen in all my born days.
If you're zipping off 3-5 thousandths of an inch, the rotary trimmer do-dads work just fine. If you're cutting off a 1/4" or more, yeah, get a saw. Haha
That's how I cut 45 Colt to 45 S&W (Schofield) length. You can use 44 Special data if your bullet weight and psi limits are the same. Save your brass filings to add to the casting pot for tough bullets.. If you do it correctly. Thanks for the video...
Yeah I would expect variances in OEM brass. How much? Not sure, but I would expect it. If I had a pile of brass I wanted to true up, uniform, standardize, fix.... for lack of better words, I'd just bear down and take the long arduous time and do it: de-prime, wet tumble clean, dry, anneal, trim to length/sort, resize, and put in buckets ready for loading. Brass prep is always the most time consuming part of everything.
Thinking on it just hesitation on the cost of bullets since I do not cast my own. But thinking highly of the BFR 500 JRH or 500 S&W BFR. Just want something that will finalize my hard recoil obsession. Thanks for all the content.
Under BB product page on the 340 +p+: _They are as follows; Ruger Red Hawk, Ruger Super Red Hawk (the Ruger Alaskan is a short barrel Super Redhawk), Ruger Super Blackhawk or Vaquero, Freedom Arms Model 83, Taurus Raging Bull All Steel Versions (no lightweight alloys), Colt Anaconda, _*_Magnum Research BFR_*_ and Dan Wesson Revolvers. Suitable rifles include T/C Encore, CVA Hunter, Handi Rifle and any rifle with a falling block action._