"I dont really undestand chamfered or square cut ? The brass has been used and not trimmed."
A chamferring tool from RCBS, FORSTER, LYMAN, HERTERS, etc is a double ended piece of round machine stock. Almost looks like a tiny rocket ship from the Buck Rogers days. The tool is used, either by hand or chucked in a drill or lathe type power tool. The pointed end will taper the inside of the case mouth. The inverted end (looks like the legs under a rocket) will clean the outside edge of the case mouth. They are about 3" long and 1" in diameter.
If your casemouth looks like it has a sort of knife edge, then it has been chamferred. If you can see a flat surface where the case was "cut" when produced, then it hasn't been chamferred.
One note: be very judicious when chamferring the outside of a case you want to crimp, as you want to leave a good edge there to crimp with. Just lightly dress the outside edge to clean up any cuttings from trimming, etc.
On the crimping, you can "feel" the crimp into place as you adjust the crimping die. Don't over-do it. You are not crimping a hard kicking round, so a heavy crimp is probably unwarranted. I seat my bullets to where the casemouth is at the top of the crimping groove. The case will be a tad shorter after crimping and I like the crimp groove "filled" so to speak. It is a "what do I want" kind of adjustment. Many ways are the right ways and you have to find what works for you.
I read some bad stuff about using a Lee Factory Crimp Die on revolver cases, and that they were great on rifle cases. My experience has shown that I like them on the rifle cases and my jury is still out on using them with revolver cases.
I ran some over the chronograph yesterday, and I really think the LFCD tightened the group a bit, though not dramatically. I was shooting 2" or less groups at 50ft offhand, and the last was with the LFCD batch and maybe cut 1.25", again offhand at 50ft.
The book says "don't shot offhand over a chronograph, as you might hit and damage the chronograph." My 49th shot out of a 50shot batch showed up at twice the normal velocity on the readout. The bullet cut the wire that joins the two skyscreens, clipped the top of the case that holds the 2nd light, and punched a nice half-caliber slot in the top edge of my Chrony. Just like the book said I would.
We pulled the screw out that retains the 2nd light, tapped the Chrony case back into shape with a brass hammer and backing block, and soldered the wires back together. Shot #50 was within the same velocity spread as the rest of the batch, so I'm guessing it is OK, at least for now.
Imprssive what a 215grWFNPB can do in a 41Mag Marlin rifle at 1470fps 10ft from the muzzle (where the Chrony was!) This same load does 1150fps in my 5.5" Ruger Bisley Blackhawk. Mild, very pleasant and accurate from my standards. I'm not a bench-rest shooter.
"Can it be To much pressure when crimping ? To clarifiey the thin strip usually appears at the outside of the case mouth . I have to do it again and pay more attention to small detail."
Still sounds like it's from the bullet, not the case, but let us know what you find!
Regards,
Sweetwater