20 Vartag

K&M has a nice set-up. The neck turner can be put in a grip which makes it a lot easier to control. And, they have a case holder you can put in a drill motor, and an outer housing which makes it easier to use. I ended up putting rubber Talon grip material on the outside, so I'm able to tighten the case in the shell-holder.

K&M.jpg
 
K&M has a nice set-up. The neck turner can be put in a grip which makes it a lot easier to control. And, they have a case holder you can put in a drill motor, and an outer housing which makes it easier to use. I ended up putting rubber Talon grip material on the outside, so I'm able to tighten the case in the shell-holder.

View attachment 561
You think hand held is better than a bench mount unit?
 
You think hand held is better than a bench mount unit?
I've only done it this way, so I don't have a comparison. It works well for me, I have done many thousand cases, as I use and also sell 20 Vartarg brass, plus now turn for 221 FB, 20 Practical and 17 Mach IV. I started doing my 22-250 cases recently, as I see the practical reason for it. If it's just to skim turn necks, to make them more uniform, so they have more consistent neck tension, and such.
 
K&M has a nice set-up. The neck turner can be put in a grip which makes it a lot easier to control. And, they have a case holder you can put in a drill motor, and an outer housing which makes it easier to use. I ended up putting rubber Talon grip material on the outside, so I'm able to tighten the case in the shell-holder.

View attachment 561
I like the larger adapter that holds the neck turning tool, is it just a round piece of aluminium with a slot for the tool?

After spending most of my life working spanners I have a bit of carpel tunnel so any prolonged use of smaller tools i end up with quite a bit of pain.
The latter Sinclair neck turning tool and the Pumpkin are a lot less painful to use.
 
I built a gear motor set up quite a few years ago, what speed does yours turn at?
IIRC........it's a Baldor 1/8hp right-angle gearmotor.....172rpm.....41 inch-pounds of torque. I think I've a pic somewhere.
I use the K&M carbide neck-turning pilots exclusively..........i.e. no galling and leaves a very smooth burnished neck-wall interior.
For more neck-wall thickness uniformity.......I go at a moderate pace, to keep the turner at a moderate temperature......and not overheat.....causing neck thickness "drift".
From the pic......you can see the Ferguson's gage I use for checking neck-wall thickness runout (T.I.R.)..........to insure that the setup does indeed turn necks within 0.0001" T.I.R.
I check every turned case.

Kevin
 
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