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Old 02-23-2017, 12:57 PM   #1
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Precision Reloading has Rem 10ga for 44.95/100. Not cheap, but I've used them for years.
Go here https://www.precisionreloading.com/ I've never used a lub on my resizing ring, and think it would take quite a bit to wear it out. You can see if the punch is set too low and bowing the shell with a simple straight edge. Good luck.
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Old 02-23-2017, 01:14 PM   #2
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Originally Posted by Paul Harm View Post
Precision Reloading has Rem 10ga for 44.95/100. Not cheap, but I've used them for years.
Go here https://www.precisionreloading.com/ I've never used a lub on my resizing ring, and think it would take quite a bit to wear it out. You can see if the punch is set too low and bowing the shell with a simple straight edge. Good luck.
I bought a used 10ga Versamec several years ago. My resizing ring was worn out. The loader was set up for 3.5" shells when I got it, nobody reloads a lot of 3.5" 10ga. I load 300 to 500 short ten shells a year. The steel head hulls, Remington and Winchester, are hard on them. Only a couple of thousands of wear on it can cause problems. Resizing rings are cheap. With the new ring I see a lot of shiny brass on the heads of shells I am loading, before I did not. Shells sized with the new ring will chamber in my Remington and Lefever 10 bores where before they would not close if they had been fired in my Parker.
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Old 02-23-2017, 04:22 PM   #3
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I've never used a lub on my resizing ring, and think it would take quite a bit to wear it out. .
Paul,

I agree that it would take quite a bit to wear out a resizing ring but with hulls that give you problems and even with the hulls using steel, a spray of lube like One-Shot up inside the ring makes them as smooth as butter, and one can tell the difference for quite a few hulls before doing it again. I just tried it again to see the difference on a sizer using a ring, and it is like night and day in the smoothness during resizing, especially on the upstroke when the shell is ejected. If you use it on rifle brass cases in carbide dies, then it makes sense to me when it is steel on steel. Just a helpful tip I thought with problem shells.

My automatic guns shooting the Cheddites (Hevi-Metal shells) dent the metal heads as if they were run over by a car, since they are paper-thin.
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Old 02-23-2017, 05:57 PM   #4
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Not my words. "MEC Resize Ring for 600JR

The resize ring is a wear item located on the depriming station of the MEC 600 Junior reloaders. After repeated use, this part will wear and break or it may not fully resize hulls down to proper specs. For best resizing performance, this part should be replaced every so often, depending upon your reloading volume. If you are having trouble with resizing your hulls, you may want to use the MEC SuperSizer. This is a terrific alternative to the 600JR’s resize ring."


It's a six dollar part, if you are having trouble with guns not closing on reloaded shells and you don't have a MEC Super Sizer or Size Master it could be an inexpensive solution to the problem. As I said before I was surprised that mine was worn, but again we are talking a couple thousandths that can make a difference.
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