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Old 04-30-2010, 05:25 PM
Scalce Scalce is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Greenville, SC
Posts: 125
Quote:
Originally Posted by N310toN170 View Post
Thanks for the suggestions! I have a Harbor Freight fairly close to my home and after reading thru the article had to give this method a try.

Unfortunately, the first saw only turned on about a half dozen times, then the switch went out. The second one is still working. The very first thing that should be done after unpacking it is to remove the blade cover and reinstall the screw that holds the blade in place with Loc-tite or similar compound! The blade on my assembly almost came completely undone while cutting brass.

I used the suggested method with an old .308 case but was having a hard time getting even cuts so I tried this...

Take a 1 1/2" x 1/2" piece of wood and cut two lengths between 4" and 6":

Place them together and drill a 1/4" pilot hole:

Using the pilot hole drill out to 3/8":

Now that your working with a 3/8" hole, use a 3/8" spade bit and drill to the depth of the original .223 shoulder:

Set the new wood channel in-line with the .308 case, once aligned tighten the clamp:

With this setup I was able to get a good, clean, straight cut on the brass and minimize the work needed on the much more exact trimmer blades:
Nice work with the wood holder.

Freehanding sucks because you can cut it at an angle, cut it and leave a nice tab of sharp metal to shave off, etc..

It completes our inexpensive method of trimming 300 Whisper brass.

BTW My chop blade also loosened so I had to tighten it.
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