Hey John, you drew your powder really really low on the cartridge: I know you were maybe exaggerating for the sake of the diagram, but without talking about flashover, I think this diagram boarders on dangerous.
That’s a great point and I was exaggerating to make a point like you said but you’re absolutely correct that flashover can cause a dangerous situation and you should never intentionally under-fill a case.
@@steveshortt90 Yes? Not such a problem in a short cartridge, but in a long cartridge it can be: the powder is supposed to burn “slowly” from back to front, but if it's under-filled, the primer can light the entire top surface (~5x more surface area, the powder burns off ~5x as fast which will cause a pressure spike much higher than the design specs). So Ya, it's sort of serious.
Burning the powder column from one end is actually an unavoidable problem. It's a very inefficient burn. We would be better off with ignition in the middle of the column, but it's all but impossible to achieve.
I've had a tool like this since 1983 when loading for IHMSA shooting 7TCU. If there is any doubt, it DOES make a big difference. My only quibble is the tools that index on the case mouth is too inconsistent between batches if you work on differing calibers. Do a batch of cases today, change calibers then next month if you need more cases you have to duplicate the first batch by feel and guess but no way to measure. Because of that I believe in the bushing style tool (sinclair generation II or the 21st century one). Personally, I have a precursor bushing style that has a plastic knob for hand turning (no longer sold I think). Works great even if you want to go crazy and debur 45acp or 9mm.
After watching this video I did a test. I did 400 pieces of Hornady factory ammo brass I had been holding onto. I got 9.8 grains of brass chips and flakes from inside the brass just using this one tool. I inspected a lot of them with my borescope and it was amazing how well it cleaned up all the flash holes that desperately needed deburring as there were tons of burrs on most of those 400 pieces.
I use a Lyman flash hole uniformer with the collar that is set for freshly trimmed cases. Once thing I find is the inside case base to case mouth length is not the same, even within a batch of same headstamps. The uniformer will definitely cut more brass from some cases than others, regardless of the amount of burr debris. An old timer told me to think of the flash hole the same as a fuel injector. Neither produces the consistent spray of fuel/flame it should when dirtied up. He made sense and once I began deburring flash holes, my groups improved.
Preparing brass is accomplished to maintain uniformity from shot to shot. 1. Uniform primer pocket 2. Uniform flash hole 3. Debut flash hole inside case
I have two wildcat pistols built for silhouette shooting, used Parma style Benchrest brass, and even if it was the best available at that time, the flash holes were erratic to be kind. Lyman has a similar tool, but multi caliber with an adjustable stop, that was used to deburr and slightly chamfer the inside of the hole. Your tool looks caliber or at least neck diameter specific, which looks light years better than my old one. Takes seconds, if only for peace of mind and possibly just possibly making everything possible similar, well worth the time.
Hi John, I have been using this tool for over 2 years now and definitely agree that it makes a great job of consistently cutting and squaring up the flash holes , and like you said it only needs to be done once for the life of the brass , but there will always be people that say you don’t need to do that with brass such as Lapua but I beg to differ, glad you posted up a video too cheers all the best Gianni.
I’m glad to see an old benchrest technique is being used. The video technology today vs what Precision Shooting magazine and shooters news had , twenty plus years ago would have made more of an impact on shooters.
I did some .223 Remington case-prep to zen-out yesterday and I remembered that I had one of these (which I'd bought on a whim) and decided to dig it out and use it. On some, but not all, the cases, I could definitely feel that it was doing SOMETHING. I think next time I'll lock the cases into my Lee case-trim chuck to get a better grip on them and hand-turn them counter to the tool, and compare the feel of what the tool is doing. Watched a few of your vids last night and subbed. I don't shoot anywhere near your level of accuracy (most of my centrefire shooting is pistol or milsurp for pleasure), but I'm finding it very informative.
John, Merry Christmas. I wish I could contact you personally but it is what it is. Because of your help progress is coming. Shot a .086 group today but not satisfied until it’s consistent. Good factory rifle from a well known maker but good brass and a little technique; barrel prep, brass prep, projectile consistency, etc. Blessings to you and your family.
It's punched from the bottom. That's why the inside of the case has the irregular hole. It breaks through from the bottom and the rough part is on the inside of the case. It's usually punched with the head stamp at the same time.
You may be right, But the Lapua, Peterson, ADG etc brass has SO much better flash holes than the general cheap brass I don't even bother or think its worth it myself. If I was using Hornady ,Remington, Winchester, etc (cheaper brass) I would definately do it! Just look inside their brass compared to Lapua or other top brass. Its like night and day! Its good to have other opinions and folks trying new/old things tho. I would keep checking your ES/SDs and see if its any better than without doing it. In the end its what works for you. Evidently John believes in it so more power to him. Thanks for showing folks as usual!
Nice talk. BTW, the brass you showed in your "before" example is way better than brass like we have to start with in XTC. For example, most batches of LC brass or commercial 223 brass will have far more serious flash that might interfere with ignition. Your pile of debris and chips after your batch is less than what might come out of just a few of the worst offenders. All of which is to say, it is better to have the right tool when you need it so you have the option if you want it. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!
I do it with my brass, have the odd punchout still stuck in there, or a tearoff remnant that I can feel in there. For the time it takes and only having to do it once, it seems to be worth it to my mind.
As far as consistency spend the $110 this tool is amazing. I wouldn't recommend this for bulk reloading. A properly sized end mill with or without a pilot, can clean up the internal area with a drill press and a proper shell houlder like the Forstner Case trim fixture PT1010. You don't get the consistency the 21st Century tool provides, its money well spent. For those bulk reloading maybe consider a $25 end mill in your drill press.
Thanks, gr8, informative and visual. I’m an addicted OCD reloader myself and often thought that my quest to consistent reloading has compensated for a lack of range time. One thing I’ve been wondering about is whether powder that enter the pimer and flash hole after reloading might equate to inconsistency. Surely this will happen to different amounts and degree. Ball powder more so compared to extruded powder I guess. Ammo being transported/stored in the vertical vs horizontal position. Vibration that over time might lead to compaction. No way that this potential space will be filled and compressed with a consistent amount of powder. Might this make a difference?? I know this comes down to splitting hair, but that’s what we do. I found some anecdotal information on the net of people seating primers through paper and using ‘flash hole wads’ to prevent this. More so with black powder rifles. Does anyone have more infomation or thoughts on this?
These little things add up that's why we do case processing.. Many trimmers, trim uneven with in +, - .005 around the same case. Why not do things the right way? Thank you for permoting doing things the right way; we need it. It is also challenges the manufactures when you bring things up.
Been doing this for years, a cheap usb camera like a Teslong is good for this as using my $1500 bore scope for this is a risk. Some of these cases inside finish is poor, just buy better brass to start with like Lapua. I did a ballistic lab test on primers and that showed a big SD difference in primer makes and the best was not a bench rest type, but that will change batch to batch i think.
What are your thoughts on chamfering the pocket side of the hole as well? The theory of forming a nozzel so the flame propogates as a jet into the powder
I would be interested in seeing a brass that was once fired and not cleaned up before and after. Makes sense that every little thing you can do to make the brass as consistent as possible would be better, especially at the level you're shooting.
Yeah I can definitely do a before and after without cleaning up and see what happens. If seems like it's worth reporting I'll make another video followup.
Hi John, luv your knowledge and insight. Does Peterson CNC their brass. I'm new to a lot of this and hearing about CNC'd brass is a first for me. Thanks!!
Does flash hole concentricity matter? I just picked up some Aguila brass and all of the flash holes are clearly and visibly punched off-center. I don't even need to measure with dial calipers to see that all of this brass is off a good 1/32 of an inch. Should I reload these? How will this affect ES and SD?
Yes, I think the proper tool makes a huge difference. Most flash hole tools will remove the burr, but the chamfer will be very inconsistent. It's a case of benchrest lore making it into to mainstream and the benefits get lost in translation.
I’m just wondering if chamfering the primer side of the flash hole would help also? I’ve never been that worried about flash holes but I’m just curious.
You don’t believe a chamfer on the flash hole would promote a better more consistent burn of the powder? I found that trimming the case to minimum saami specs and deburring before uniforming the flash hole with a collet type tool, got the most consistent results. Burrs on flash holes are a variable. Get rid of them I say... Great before and after photos.
Have you done any chronograph and/or accurracy tests with brass not uniformed, then the same brass uniformed to see if it really makes a difference? It makes sense to uniform the flash hole, but I am curious to know how much actual difference it makes.
Yeah I've tested it and to be honest I don't bother anymore given how clean recent Lapua brass has been in the flash hole however that's my particular choice. I know there are still lots of people who who feel it's needed and depending on the brand of brass I would probably agree.
@@FClassJohn Thanks for your reply. I was wondering how much difference it makes to an average shooter like me who uses less than premium brass. I'll have to do my own tests. Thanks again.
@@ronkellam8184 And the reality is there are so many things that go into the ignition sequence that cleaning out flash holes is honestly one of the last things I would probably advise most people to work on. Things like primer choice, primer depth, firing pin springs and powder choices often have a much bigger impact on extreme spread or standard deviation then cleaning out a flash whole will.
@@FClassJohn I was just wondering about what all to do and not to do about flash holes And the 1st time I come over to watch and join your channel you have thatvon.How lucky was I!!! Merry Christmas
For some of my hunting rifles, I've used poorer quality brass like Federal and substantially more burr debris compared to what you show with your quality Peterson brass. With virgin brass, do you also uniform the primer pockets?
I can imagine lesser brass have more issues for sure. As for pockets I’m not currently uniform of them but am going to be retesting that process next year.
I had to check if this was an old April fools video. The amount sexual innuendos are intense lol. I can’t decided if it was intentional or not. Either way great video.
I'm sorry John but my mind went into the gutter around the 4:20 mark to 4:40 lol! Hunting for the hole in the dark, just want to get it in and start working it! Great videos!
I actually don't do this anymore. Lapua brass is coming out really good and I'm not seeing the need. However in cases where I've done it or if you're using brass that needs it, you only need to do it once.
What is the affect of drilling the flash hole a little larger? Why is it set as a specific size? I don't see in the SAAMI drawings where the flash hole size is specified, maybe it doesn't matter to a point-don't want to weaken the case head of course.
@@FClassJohn Understood. I see that K&M has a premium flash hole deburring tool that also uniforms the flash hole itself. Just curious if you had experimented with that as well and what the results were.
There is so much in this hobby (i.e. reloading, at any degree of precision) that can be made to sound extremely dodgy. Our obsession with the exact right kind of lube, for example.
Very very little but that's not really the point for me. I don't chase SD, I mostly chase ES but either way it's a very minor improvement but somehow, in someway it'll help something that I may never see. In all fairness I can probably bang out the same ES/SD with or without doing this but knowing it's clean across the board in there just gives me more confidence.
@@FClassJohn I have been doing a bit of research on this, and according to the benchrest guys, it's hard to measure any benefits unless you run across the rare buggered flash hole, but better safe than sorry. Cheap and easy. I have a video idea that I believe many would be interested in watching. Maybe a series on what you did to bring your ES down. What matters most, what matters some.
Yeah I know there are a number of people who say it doesn’t matter but like I said it’s a simple process that mentally gives me a little more peace I’m OK with it.
Bryan Litz doesn't believe it makes a difference on QUALITY brass, he definitely specified that at one point at least. But if you're getting bargain brass I can't see it not making a difference.
@@FClassJohn Amen. The psychology of the sport is not something to be ignored. Most of my flyers are not because of my gun or my ammo, or even my hand, but rather because I got excited or distracted or upset. It's one less thing to think about in the line.
Because in general it isn't brass that holds up nearly as well as Lapua nor is it as consistent. I know there's people who like it, but if you use the equipment list from the 2022 as a reference, out of the 188 respondents to the survey, only about 6% of people used Norma. It's hard to describe, but things are just so much easier for load development and shooting with Lapua.
well you ask how good this is working? I can tell you it works i used a carcano 6.5 i set up a box at 25 steps i hit target, i went to 50 yards shot a few shots and i set it aside yes a scout scoped rifle it was less then 1 moa i made the mount fit, i shimmed it with washers and glue! you ask why ( i drove a it to a gunsmith 100 miles away with proper mount and scope and need 4 holes drilled and taped i went back a month later not done i could not wait any more he said it was not a good shooting rifle) ??? if the guy in daily plaza had his ducks in a row would get same out come! sound or no sound! this was a chopped off one! i went threw ever 6.5 rifle i could put my hands on why you ask i cut lawn for a lady her dead husband worked under jfk had some to do with ag stuff farming secretary of ag under Jfk i went to 1000 yard shoot i heard same sound as tape on his murder! why after the med scoped me i could not do to much they forgot i was on blood thinner(big goof) ever since summer my life been upside down relation died his place was gone threw and set on fire! the day before i got there! i got back from 2 week stay at home order and the week one was done my neighbors though it was great time to pack up and move and not tell me or any one!! great right! how about 3 feet of snow in one night & then a 4 days to shovel out after restocked it all melted to 8-12 inches and ice all over ? some one in Pa rigged the election? some one mad?
@Nevada Smith lol theres two good ones right close together. Damned immaturity! But its funny af. Much respect to John. Great video. I learned alot even aside from my humor 😇💀🙋
When no less than 4 different multi world record holders and HOF BR shooters going on record in multiple interviews state they have done countless hours of testing messing with flash holes and do not mess with them. It either has no effect or a negative effect. We are talking SR LR 100-1000 record holders. Some with direct access and sponsors by Lapua Vhit, Alpha, Peterson Berger, McMillian etc. So have you actually tested this and can see a statistically relevant positive effect or are you just once again doing something blindly just hoping it helps and because you are over thinking stressing and obsessing which is more about insecurity than anything else.
Hey John, you drew your powder really really low on the cartridge: I know you were maybe exaggerating for the sake of the diagram, but without talking about flashover, I think this diagram boarders on dangerous.
That’s a great point and I was exaggerating to make a point like you said but you’re absolutely correct that flashover can cause a dangerous situation and you should never intentionally under-fill a case.
Are you serious???
@@steveshortt90 Yes? Not such a problem in a short cartridge, but in a long cartridge it can be: the powder is supposed to burn “slowly” from back to front, but if it's under-filled, the primer can light the entire top surface (~5x more surface area, the powder burns off ~5x as fast which will cause a pressure spike much higher than the design specs). So Ya, it's sort of serious.
@@wilfdarr I couldn’t say it any better.
Burning the powder column from one end is actually an unavoidable problem. It's a very inefficient burn. We would be better off with ignition in the middle of the column, but it's all but impossible to achieve.
I've had a tool like this since 1983 when loading for IHMSA shooting 7TCU. If there is any doubt, it DOES make a big difference. My only quibble is the tools that index on the case mouth is too inconsistent between batches if you work on differing calibers. Do a batch of cases today, change calibers then next month if you need more cases you have to duplicate the first batch by feel and guess but no way to measure. Because of that I believe in the bushing style tool (sinclair generation II or the 21st century one). Personally, I have a precursor bushing style that has a plastic knob for hand turning (no longer sold I think). Works great even if you want to go crazy and debur 45acp or 9mm.
Thanks for the inside view of the brass. That helped. Didn't even think of using my bore scope to view inside the case.
After watching this video I did a test. I did 400 pieces of Hornady factory ammo brass I had been holding onto. I got 9.8 grains of brass chips and flakes from inside the brass just using this one tool. I inspected a lot of them with my borescope and it was amazing how well it cleaned up all the flash holes that desperately needed deburring as there were tons of burrs on most of those 400 pieces.
I use a Lyman flash hole uniformer with the collar that is set for freshly trimmed cases. Once thing I find is the inside case base to case mouth length is not the same, even within a batch of same headstamps. The uniformer will definitely cut more brass from some cases than others, regardless of the amount of burr debris.
An old timer told me to think of the flash hole the same as a fuel injector. Neither produces the consistent spray of fuel/flame it should when dirtied up. He made sense and once I began deburring flash holes, my groups improved.
Yeah that’s the only problem with this collet stop models like the Lyman. They can fluctuate a little. But I love you analogy!
Thanks again John. All your videos help me greatly.
Preparing brass is accomplished to maintain uniformity from shot to shot.
1. Uniform primer pocket
2. Uniform flash hole
3. Debut flash hole inside case
Thank you, didn’t need to waste time with this yak yak to realize those simple techniques.
I have two wildcat pistols built for silhouette shooting, used Parma style Benchrest brass, and even if it was the best available at that time, the flash holes were erratic to be kind. Lyman has a similar tool, but multi caliber with an adjustable stop, that was used to deburr and slightly chamfer the inside of the hole. Your tool looks caliber or at least neck diameter specific, which looks light years better than my old one. Takes seconds, if only for peace of mind and possibly just possibly making everything possible similar, well worth the time.
Hi John, I have been using this tool for over 2 years now and definitely agree that it makes a great job of consistently cutting and squaring up the flash holes , and like you said it only needs to be done once for the life of the brass , but there will always be people that say you don’t need to do that with brass such as Lapua but I beg to differ, glad you posted up a video too cheers all the best Gianni.
That’s great to hear that you have the same success using the tool.
The before and after in the case shots sold me. Very informative
I'm glad you found it helpful.
I’m glad to see an old benchrest technique is being used. The video technology today vs what Precision Shooting magazine and shooters news had , twenty plus years ago would have made more of an impact on shooters.
I did some .223 Remington case-prep to zen-out yesterday and I remembered that I had one of these (which I'd bought on a whim) and decided to dig it out and use it. On some, but not all, the cases, I could definitely feel that it was doing SOMETHING. I think next time I'll lock the cases into my Lee case-trim chuck to get a better grip on them and hand-turn them counter to the tool, and compare the feel of what the tool is doing.
Watched a few of your vids last night and subbed. I don't shoot anywhere near your level of accuracy (most of my centrefire shooting is pistol or milsurp for pleasure), but I'm finding it very informative.
Thank you for the kind words and I’m glad you find the videos helpful.
Thanks for sharing. Nice to see just what is going on with the primer holes after cleaning them up.
Glad it helped.
Wow that's a pretty big difference by the looks of it.
Yeah for sure.
Hello John, thanks for video! I do mine as well and it nice to see the inside shot to see the finished work. Consistency is everything! Great job!
John, Merry Christmas. I wish I could contact you personally but it is what it is. Because of your help progress is coming. Shot a .086 group today but not satisfied until it’s consistent. Good factory rifle from a well known maker but good brass and a little technique; barrel prep, brass prep, projectile consistency, etc. Blessings to you and your family.
It's punched from the bottom. That's why the inside of the case has the irregular hole. It breaks through from the bottom and the rough part is on the inside of the case. It's usually punched with the head stamp at the same time.
You may be right, But the Lapua, Peterson, ADG etc brass has SO much better flash holes than the general cheap brass I don't even bother or think its worth it myself. If I was using Hornady ,Remington, Winchester, etc (cheaper brass) I would definately do it! Just look inside their brass compared to Lapua or other top brass. Its like night and day! Its good to have other opinions and folks trying new/old things tho. I would keep checking your ES/SDs and see if its any better than without doing it. In the end its what works for you. Evidently John believes in it so more power to him. Thanks for showing folks as usual!
I looked this video up due to buying 2 boxes of brand new adg brass and I can literally see burs inside my flash holes...
This guy trying to tell a world class shooter what to do😂🤣 comical
Nice talk. BTW, the brass you showed in your "before" example is way better than brass like we have to start with in XTC. For example, most batches of LC brass or commercial 223 brass will have far more serious flash that might interfere with ignition. Your pile of debris and chips after your batch is less than what might come out of just a few of the worst offenders. All of which is to say, it is better to have the right tool when you need it so you have the option if you want it. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!
Yeah I agree and the right tool helps for sure. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you too!!!
Consistent with reloads for consistent performance.
Makes sense to me.
Thanks for the information.
Glad you enjoyed the video.
I do it with my brass, have the odd punchout still stuck in there, or a tearoff remnant that I can feel in there. For the time it takes and only having to do it once, it seems to be worth it to my mind.
Exactly how I feel. 👍🏻
As far as consistency spend the $110 this tool is amazing. I wouldn't recommend this for bulk reloading.
A properly sized end mill with or without a pilot, can clean up the internal area with a drill press and a proper shell houlder like the Forstner Case trim fixture PT1010. You don't get the consistency the 21st Century tool provides, its money well spent. For those bulk reloading maybe consider a $25 end mill in your drill press.
Eye opening. I use one of the collet tools for deburring flash holes. But, I can see where you might be doing harm. Thanks for the video!
Awesome explanation! The up close visual certainly helped. Thank you for that and merry Xmas!
Glad it helped and Merry Christmas to you too!!
Thanks, gr8, informative and visual.
I’m an addicted OCD reloader myself and often thought that my quest to consistent reloading has compensated for a lack of range time. One thing I’ve been wondering about is whether powder that enter the pimer and flash hole after reloading might equate to inconsistency. Surely this will happen to different amounts and degree. Ball powder more so compared to extruded powder I guess. Ammo being transported/stored in the vertical vs horizontal position. Vibration that over time might lead to compaction. No way that this potential space will be filled and compressed with a consistent amount of powder. Might this make a difference?? I know this comes down to splitting hair, but that’s what we do.
I found some anecdotal information on the net of people seating primers through paper and using ‘flash hole wads’ to prevent this. More so with black powder rifles. Does anyone have more infomation or thoughts on this?
Looking at every detail is an F class shooters attention to Xs!!! Kudos
Thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
These little things add up that's why we do case processing.. Many trimmers, trim uneven with in +, - .005 around the same case.
Why not do things the right way? Thank you for permoting doing things the right way; we need it. It is also challenges the manufactures when you bring things up.
Huge difference will have to go and get the tool😁
Preparing brass is accomplished to maintain uniformity from shot to shot.
Been doing this for years, a cheap usb camera like a Teslong is good for this as using my $1500 bore scope for this is a risk. Some of these cases inside finish is poor, just buy better brass to start with like Lapua. I did a ballistic lab test on primers and that showed a big SD difference in primer makes and the best was not a bench rest type, but that will change batch to batch i think.
What are your thoughts on chamfering the pocket side of the hole as well?
The theory of forming a nozzel so the flame propogates as a jet into the powder
I've actually been testing it but no definitive data yet.
I would be interested in seeing a brass that was once fired and not cleaned up before and after. Makes sense that every little thing you can do to make the brass as consistent as possible would be better, especially at the level you're shooting.
Yeah I can definitely do a before and after without cleaning up and see what happens. If seems like it's worth reporting I'll make another video followup.
Hi John, luv your knowledge and insight. Does Peterson CNC their brass. I'm new to a lot of this and hearing about CNC'd brass is a first for me. Thanks!!
Thank you. No it’s not CNC. CNC brass will run about $5 per piece.
Does flash hole concentricity matter? I just picked up some Aguila brass and all of the flash holes are clearly and visibly punched off-center. I don't even need to measure with dial calipers to see that all of this brass is off a good 1/32 of an inch. Should I reload these? How will this affect ES and SD?
Yes, I think the proper tool makes a huge difference. Most flash hole tools will remove the burr, but the chamfer will be very inconsistent. It's a case of benchrest lore making it into to mainstream and the benefits get lost in translation.
I’m just wondering if chamfering the primer side of the flash hole would help also? I’ve never been that worried about flash holes but I’m just curious.
I'm actually testing that as well but no results yet.
You don’t believe a chamfer on the flash hole would promote a better more consistent burn of the powder?
I found that trimming the case to minimum saami specs and deburring before uniforming the flash hole with a collet type tool, got the most consistent results.
Burrs on flash holes are a variable. Get rid of them I say...
Great before and after photos.
Glad you enjoyed it and found it helpful.
Have you done any chronograph and/or accurracy tests with brass not uniformed, then the same brass uniformed to see if it really makes a difference? It makes sense to uniform the flash hole, but I am curious to know how much actual difference it makes.
Yeah I've tested it and to be honest I don't bother anymore given how clean recent Lapua brass has been in the flash hole however that's my particular choice. I know there are still lots of people who who feel it's needed and depending on the brand of brass I would probably agree.
@@FClassJohn Thanks for your reply. I was wondering how much difference it makes to an average shooter like me who uses less than premium brass. I'll have to do my own tests. Thanks again.
@@ronkellam8184 And the reality is there are so many things that go into the ignition sequence that cleaning out flash holes is honestly one of the last things I would probably advise most people to work on. Things like primer choice, primer depth, firing pin springs and powder choices often have a much bigger impact on extreme spread or standard deviation then cleaning out a flash whole will.
Great video.Im a new subscriber and was curious about the flash hole.Got lucky on this video after watching Erik Cortina .He recommend your channel
That's great and I appreciate you coming over to check it out.
@@FClassJohn I was just wondering about what all to do and not to do about flash holes And the 1st time I come over to watch and join your channel you have thatvon.How lucky was I!!!
Merry Christmas
@@TexasTrained Merry Christmas to you as well!!
For some of my hunting rifles, I've used poorer quality brass like Federal and substantially more burr debris compared to what you show with your quality Peterson brass.
With virgin brass, do you also uniform the primer pockets?
I can imagine lesser brass have more issues for sure. As for pockets I’m not currently uniform of them but am going to be retesting that process next year.
I had to check if this was an old April fools video. The amount sexual innuendos are intense lol. I can’t decided if it was intentional or not. Either way great video.
No April Fools I promise. Just worked out that way because of the topic I guess. 🤪
I'm sorry John but my mind went into the gutter around the 4:20 mark to 4:40 lol! Hunting for the hole in the dark, just want to get it in and start working it!
Great videos!
By 0:44 I was already laughing.
🤣😂🤣😂
@@wilfdarr poor John, tried to make a serious video and there’s a bunch of “dirty minded ppl” making it difficult!!
Good Vid John
Thank you
I still do mine
do you do this after every firing for brass or just once?
I actually don't do this anymore. Lapua brass is coming out really good and I'm not seeing the need. However in cases where I've done it or if you're using brass that needs it, you only need to do it once.
@F-Class John Thank you for the quick response. I'm currently doing it on some federal brass right now
What is the affect of drilling the flash hole a little larger? Why is it set as a specific size? I don't see in the SAAMI drawings where the flash hole size is specified, maybe it doesn't matter to a point-don't want to weaken the case head of course.
I'm not drilling a larger hole, I'm simply devouring the inside edge of it. It just make for a consistent exit point for the flame.
@@FClassJohn Understood. I see that K&M has a premium flash hole deburring tool that also uniforms the flash hole itself. Just curious if you had experimented with that as well and what the results were.
@@madman432000 I've honestly never messed with the actual hole size. Sorry.
4:36 Amen brother
Cortina fully automated bullet pointing... you didn’t hear it from me. Maybe you can get him to automate deburing flash holes for you.
Yeah I saw that. Funny about the automated flash holes...😂
great video!
Thank you
Did you try the k&m one if so is that one good
@Nevada Smith thanks 👍🏽
Computer analysis by another Bench Shooter suggests there is no difference?
Nice video again. Cheers
Thank you much.
Getting rammed up the bottom is never a preferred technique
Yeah drilling is definitely the preferred process...
Lmfao
There is so much in this hobby (i.e. reloading, at any degree of precision) that can be made to sound extremely dodgy. Our obsession with the exact right kind of lube, for example.
How does this impact deviation?
Very very little but that's not really the point for me. I don't chase SD, I mostly chase ES but either way it's a very minor improvement but somehow, in someway it'll help something that I may never see. In all fairness I can probably bang out the same ES/SD with or without doing this but knowing it's clean across the board in there just gives me more confidence.
@@FClassJohn I have been doing a bit of research on this, and according to the benchrest guys, it's hard to measure any benefits unless you run across the rare buggered flash hole, but better safe than sorry. Cheap and easy.
I have a video idea that I believe many would be interested in watching. Maybe a series on what you did to bring your ES down. What matters most, what matters some.
@@codyway7424 yeah I agree and I can also work on a video like you suggested. Thank you for the suggestion.
I find that my Lapua brass has pretty clean flash holes. Hornady not so much. Bryan Litz doesn’t believe flashhole deburring makes any difference....
Yeah I know there are a number of people who say it doesn’t matter but like I said it’s a simple process that mentally gives me a little more peace I’m OK with it.
Bryan Litz doesn't believe it makes a difference on QUALITY brass, he definitely specified that at one point at least. But if you're getting bargain brass I can't see it not making a difference.
@@FClassJohn Amen. The psychology of the sport is not something to be ignored. Most of my flyers are not because of my gun or my ammo, or even my hand, but rather because I got excited or distracted or upset. It's one less thing to think about in the line.
@@wilfdarr I totally agree.
Why do you guys never mention Norma?
Because in general it isn't brass that holds up nearly as well as Lapua nor is it as consistent. I know there's people who like it, but if you use the equipment list from the 2022 as a reference, out of the 188 respondents to the survey, only about 6% of people used Norma. It's hard to describe, but things are just so much easier for load development and shooting with Lapua.
well you ask how good this is working? I can tell you it works i used a carcano 6.5 i set up a box at 25 steps i hit target, i went to 50 yards shot a few shots and i set it aside yes a scout scoped rifle it was less then 1 moa i made the mount fit, i shimmed it with washers and glue! you ask why ( i drove a it to a gunsmith 100 miles away with proper mount and scope and need 4 holes drilled and taped i went back a month later not done i could not wait any more he said it was not a good shooting rifle) ??? if the guy in daily plaza had his ducks in a row would get same out come! sound or no sound! this was a chopped off one! i went threw ever 6.5 rifle i could put my hands on why you ask i cut lawn for a lady her dead husband worked under jfk had some to do with ag stuff farming secretary of ag under Jfk i went to 1000 yard shoot i heard same sound as tape on his murder! why after the med scoped me i could not do to much they forgot i was on blood thinner(big goof) ever since summer my life been upside down relation died his place was gone threw and set on fire! the day before i got there! i got back from 2 week stay at home order and the week one was done my neighbors though it was great time to pack up and move and not tell me or any one!! great right! how about 3 feet of snow in one night & then a 4 days to shovel out after restocked it all melted to 8-12 inches and ice all over ? some one in Pa rigged the election? some one mad?
0:50 and 4:35. Sorry, I couldn’t help myself
Ha ha ... you said rammed up the bottom 🤪
He said it rammed in the bottom😂😂😂💀💀💀💀😳🤔
@Nevada Smith lol theres two good ones right close together. Damned immaturity! But its funny af. Much respect to John. Great video. I learned alot even aside from my humor 😇💀🙋
@@mybuickskill6979 glad you liked it on both fronts. 😜
@@FClassJohn it's the backs i worry about😂💀
I just want to get it in and start working it....
I find it hard to watch your videos with all of these ads mate.
When no less than 4 different multi world record holders and HOF BR shooters going on record in multiple interviews state they have done countless hours of testing messing with flash holes and do not mess with them. It either has no effect or a negative effect. We are talking SR LR 100-1000 record holders. Some with direct access and sponsors by Lapua Vhit, Alpha, Peterson Berger, McMillian etc.
So have you actually tested this and can see a statistically relevant positive effect or are you just once again doing something blindly just hoping it helps and because you are over thinking stressing and obsessing which is more about insecurity than anything else.
There were quite a few 'That's what she said' moments in this video.
Link is dead: 17 April 2024.
Thank you, I just fixed it. Not sure what happened.