Remington brass
- Verminator2
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- Joined: Wed Dec 27, 2006 11:03 am
- .204 Ruger Guns: DPMS 24" stainless fluted.
- Location: Eastern OR
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Remington brass
Does anybody here use remington brass? How good is it? Thanks.
Bomb Squad: If you see me running, try and keep up
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Remington
I use it more than any other, though I've got some Winchester, Hornady and Nosler. I use it for .204, .221 Fireball (only commercial product), 20VT (from .221FB). I prep it completely in every case, and have found it very satisfactory. I'm sure you'll find contrary views.
- Rick in Oregon
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- .204 Ruger Guns: Sako 75V, Cooper MTV, Kimber 84M, Cust M700 11 Twist
- Location: High Desert of Central Oregon
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- Junior Member
- Posts: 75
- Joined: Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:05 pm
- .204 Ruger Guns: Rem 700 VLS, Howa 1500 SSHB
- Location: Powell Butte, Oregon
Verminator2
I absolutely will NOT buy Remington .204 Ruger brass.
Don't know whether I got a bad lot, but my hunting partner and I both bought 4 bags of 100 each at Sportsmans' Warehouse. The neck walls were so inconsistent in thickness that I couldn't even neck turn them and get the necks concentric. Run out was terrible.
I took them all back except for the one bag I had opened and got Winchester. Still trying to salvage those 100 cases but will probably end up throwing them in the split brass bucket and selling them for scrap.
These comments only pertain to .204 Ruger as R-P brass in other calibers are just fine.
Rgds, Gerry
I absolutely will NOT buy Remington .204 Ruger brass.
Don't know whether I got a bad lot, but my hunting partner and I both bought 4 bags of 100 each at Sportsmans' Warehouse. The neck walls were so inconsistent in thickness that I couldn't even neck turn them and get the necks concentric. Run out was terrible.
I took them all back except for the one bag I had opened and got Winchester. Still trying to salvage those 100 cases but will probably end up throwing them in the split brass bucket and selling them for scrap.
These comments only pertain to .204 Ruger as R-P brass in other calibers are just fine.
Rgds, Gerry
NRA Life Member
OHA, VHA, OSSA, SCI
OHA, VHA, OSSA, SCI
- Rick in Oregon
- Moderator
- Posts: 4942
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2005 4:20 pm
- .204 Ruger Guns: Sako 75V, Cooper MTV, Kimber 84M, Cust M700 11 Twist
- Location: High Desert of Central Oregon
- Contact:
- Rick in Oregon
- Moderator
- Posts: 4942
- Joined: Thu Dec 01, 2005 4:20 pm
- .204 Ruger Guns: Sako 75V, Cooper MTV, Kimber 84M, Cust M700 11 Twist
- Location: High Desert of Central Oregon
- Contact:
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- Junior Member
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- Location: Denver , CO
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- Junior Member
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- .204 Ruger Guns: stiller predator, lilja no 5 1 in 12
- Location: Melbourne Australia
I use Rem brass and am very happy how it has gone. Am having a semi custom 204 built and thought the Lilja might be fed with Norma. Anyone who has tried Norma is welcome to tell me to save the money and keep buying Rem if that was their experience.
I dont like Win brass from experience with poor quality control in 243wssm and 300 wsm. Split necks in unfired new brass!
I dont like Win brass from experience with poor quality control in 243wssm and 300 wsm. Split necks in unfired new brass!
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- .204 Ruger Guns: Ruger 204 Ultra Light, Ruger 204 Standard, Ruger Target Gray
- Location: Hemet California
Brass
I've been using Winchester brass I have a thousand in 204 I did have a few split necks and found that some have flaws in the necks if you look real close I threw them out. I have lost a few to split neck. The Hornady brass gives me the tightest groups for some reason I was worried at first because they are short in the neck but this works well with the case stretch. The Hornady brass hangs up in the shell holders which makes it a pain to reload. I was thinking of buying a Lot of 1000 of the Remington brass as this helps in the rotation of brass as the Winchester get old. Nosler brass is a little expensive by the thousand but I might invest in it as it comes camfered and the flash hole is reamed.
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- Location: s. w. Idaho
I have never used Remington brass in the 204, only Winchester. I am on my sixth firing of an original lot of 400 cases. I have yet to have a split neck, but I have annealed all cases after four firings. After each firing, each case is checked again for run out and culled if the case neck after neck sizing has more than .003 run out. I have only had to cull six or eight cases. Bulk brass like Winchester or Remington is not going to be perfect. A lot of work can get it to be as good a it is going to get, but it is never going to be Lapua. Case wall thickness variations can not be overcome. The bottom line is that for field applications, within reasonable distances Winchester brass works just fine.