Skip to main content
Help Center Community Shop

making cannelures

Comments

7 comments

  • Hawk Carse
    Corbin and CH-4D make canneluring tools. Lay the bullet on the rollers and turn the crank to drive the cannelure wheel.

    What caliber, bullet, and brass are you using?
    0
  • fullcaseload
    327 Fed.Mag., Rainier 100 gr.(.312 inches) JHP, Federal and Speer brass(nickle plated). Thanks for the makers names, I'll look them up.
    0
  • gunnut505
    I've been using a pipe cutting tool; just don't use one with a wobbly blade! I took a file to the wheel/blade, and did some coining all around it. Works great and didn't cost anything.
    0
  • fullcaseload
    gunnut505, couple of questions. Is it the smaller size tubing cutter or a fuller size pipe cutter? How do hold the bullet while turning the cutter? Okay, 3 questions, and how do you get the repeated results of depth of cannelure and distance from bullet base? I'm thinking one might suffer through a few bullets but if one had over a thousand to do it would end up taking a lot of time and probably too many variances. Thanks
    0
  • RCrosby
    For several years I used the Corbin tool to put cannelures in .400 jacketed bullets that I used in my 38-40. Nice tool. Easy to control the depth and uniformity of "cut". I appreciate the simplicity of the pipe cutter approach but don't see how it could consistently approach the results the corbin gives.
    0
  • Mobuck
    Just my opinion but the pipe cutter is a BAD idea. While it may prevent bullet pull, it will also cause the jacket to break at that point. Having a portion of the front jacket break during expansion will result in poor bullet performance whil having it break off in flight will make for fliers.
    0
  • fullcaseload
    update- I bought a CH cannelure making tool off of ebay and have cannelured, loaded and shot approximately 300 rounds to date. Canneluring did solve my problem of the bullet creeping out of the case. When I received the tool I set it up as to location and depth for overall case length and roll crimp. Setting the first dozen bullets side by side on a shelf of my reloading bench showed visible variations in the width of the cannelure plus the wheel crank had some spots that would grab/bind. Pulled it apart, cleaned it, smoothed the galling with fine emery cloth, lubed, and reassembled it. Operated much smoother but the well used tool still has sloppy tolerances. Seller did not misrepresent as this is not readily apparent unless you use it. Called "Dave" at CH Tool and found for a little under $20.00 more I could of had a brand new one (includes shipping). Should have checked there first, oh well, usually my lessons cost me more than that. As long as I operate the tool very deliberately I can keep the results "looking" the same which has appeared to be good enough for consistent end results. As it approximately triples the time per bullet I'm going to buy a new tool if I decide to keep using bullets bought without a cannelure. I have a correction to make in a previous post in this thread. I said the bullet were JHPs, they are actually plated instead of jacketed. I have been told by others that they have had the plating crack and/or peel when canneluring, which I totally understand. So far I have not encountered that problem. Maybe it's due to the shallowness of my cannelure or maybe the plating job on my batch of bullets,IDK. OK, I'm done, sorry this was so long.
    0

Please sign in to leave a comment.

Recent Activity

Didn’t find what you’re looking for?