"I couldn't figure out why the resized case necks weren't exactly concentric with the case body and base. The pot metal had started to wear badly where the ram came through the body of the press. This allowed the ram to come up to the die on a slight angle and even though it was only a few degrees, it made a difference. I started to lube the ram and the lube turned silvery with the worn metal. I wrote Lee and they told me to ship it back and they would check it out. I threw it out and bought a Lyman turret and later, a Dillon SDB and a 550B."
I read all this with an amused grin. I guess the "proof" of the judgement is in "lube the ram and it turned silvery" statement? Okay, but most of us would have recognised that the user should have lubed that ram long beforits dry use had rubbed off so much silvery metal! So, Lee offered to correct the "problem" but it was spunned and he bought another press? What did he want or expect Lee to do?
If aluminum alloy is a poor material for presses then RCBS should be castigated for their Partner and some of the older Reloader Special presses, ditto for Hornady's LnL. But, no, it seems the eletists ONLY stand in line to sputter and pontificate about how "poor" Lee presses are! It gets sorta amusing, don't it? I always wonder if it ever occurs to them that compairing the expected life a light alloy press to one of iron/steel is NOT an honest appraisal!
Bent necks, from a press? Fact is, a little slop in a ram will NOT cause non-concentric necks, ever. That is caused by non-concentric dies! Unless it's travel is hindered, perhaps with a tight but poorly
aligned press (not just worn), a round brass case WILL enter a round hole in a die and perfectly self center itself as it does. So, IF the die threads and press ram are out of line a tad, the slop is a help for precision, not a hinderence. BR shooters use hand dies, hand held, and an arbor press to give TOTAL freedom for the case and dies to self align. Master riflesmiths use floating reamer holders to chamber rifles precisely, their reamers are NOT held in any solid grip. Floating fixture alignment is a common aid to precision machining - and reloading! The writer's case necks may well have been bent but it wasn't due slop in a worn press, that's simply a wrong deduction.
So, the problem went away with a new Lyman turret iron press? Well, I have one of those myself. Fact is, the turret is virtually impossible to index exactly the same each time it's rotated - side to side misalignment seems to be a fact of life with such turrets. And the effect is exactly the same as any wear on a ram, just in the east-west plane instead of north-south. After some 47 years of use, even being properly lubed, it DOES have some ram slop too, in all four planes! But, since the ram never was hard fitted, my cases always entered the dies fine and the ammo was good. Still is. BUT, due to head spring, the turret itself, I finally bought an (iron) single stage just to make precision loading easier. Doesn't matter what brand my big press is, they are all equal, including the Lee Classic Cast.
Those who buy an aluminum alloy press and make a few hundred rounds a year will be fixed for life, no sweat. Well, IF they lube it properly anyway. But, anyone who buys an alum. alloy press and fails to lube it while loading thousands of rounds a year is kidding themselves! Any such press "failure" is really a failure of the user to understand his tools and what he is doing!
New guys who just want to get started and/or know they only want to do a modest amount of reloadng do well with Lee's older presses. Then, if they get bad bit by the bug, it's time to get a more sturdy press. There will always be some dedicated work that makes the old press useful so there's no call to toss it out and say it was a bad mistake. I just don't think pushing my choice of press or dies, etc, on a new guy is helpful to most new guys, especially if my observations are personal and not valid for others. None of that's an intellectually challanging recognition is it?
Wonder what he did with the bad sizer die, the one that made bent necks in the Lee press 30 years ago?
Hope everyone has a GREAT WEEKEND!