#11
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I just thought of a solution to your dilemma...you could send the rifle over to me...I will take care of the problem
What you do, is buy the dies when you see some that are for a hornet based case, it makes deciding what caliber to do easier. LOL. Let me know if you need my FFL Larry Quote:
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Pray for Obama. Psalms 109:8 American King James Version Let his days be few; and let another take his office |
#12
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Where is he? he needs to give it up!
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Stuffing droppings into hornet nests, pushing sleeping turkeys out of trees, peeing on the backs of possums, slinging acorns at deer, and knocking coons from the trees with corn cobs since 1970. |
#13
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Ray beds the seating stem. The down side is you may need a different seating stem if you load more than one style bullet
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Shoot First... Ask questions later... On Saubier.com __________________ NRA Lifetime Endowment Member |
#14
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Yes I used J-B and bed the bullet in the stem. I then take a small drill bit and drill a relief hole down in the very tip. This helps with varying length bullet tips. I recently use a hot glue gun on my 17 Squirrel seater stem. That work fine, took longer to heat the glue gun up than do the work. I mainly use Hornady VMaxs, maybe some of the VLDs would need new bedding. The hot glue is super fast to do.
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#15
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The seating stem on the pictured AH was in a Wilson seater.
However, when seating Berger 20 grainers, I don't get that ring from the seater. V |
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