Inside Chamfer Tools — Sorting Through the Options
Shown is the Redding Model 15-P Competition Piloted Inside Chamfering Tool with pilot rod that centers in the case flash hole. Also shown is a Forster 45° Rocket Tool.
There are a wide variety of reloading tools designed to cut a slight chamfer in case necks and deburr the edge of the case mouth. You don’t need to spend a lot of money for an effective tool. A basic “rocket-style” 45° chamfering tool, such as the Forster, actually does a pretty good job taking the sharp edge off case mouths, particularly if you use a little scotch-pad (or steel wool) to smooth the edge of the cut. The Forster chamfer tool, shown below, is a nicely-made product, with sharper cutting blades than you’ll find on most other 45° chamferers. It costs $17.99 at Brownells.com.
Redding sells a handy piloted chamfering tool with a 15° inside cutting angle and removable accessory handle. This Redding Model 15-P chamferer works really well, so long as you have consistent case OALs. The pilot rod (which indexes in the flash hole) is adjustable for different cartridge types (from very short to very long). This ensures the concentricity of the inside neck chamfer to the case mouth. This quality tool works with cases from .22 to .45 Caliber.
Sinclair International offers a 28° carbide chamferer with many handy features (and sharp blades). The $29.99 Sinclair Carbide VLD Case Mouth Chamfering Tool will chamfer cases from .14 through .45 caliber. This tool features a removable 28° carbide cutter mounted in the green plastic Sinclair handle. NOTE: A hex-shaft cutter head power adapter can be purchased separately for $14.99 (Sinclair item 749-002-488WS). This can be chucked in a power screwdriver or used with the Sinclair Case Prep Power Center when doing large volumes of cases.
Many folks feel they can get smoother bullet seating by using a tool that cuts at a steeper angle. We like the 22° cutter sold by Lyman. It has a comfortable handle, and costs just $10.75 at MidsouthShooterssupply.com. The Lyman tool is an excellent value, though we’ve seen examples that needed sharpening even when new. Blade-sharpening is easily done, however.
K&M makes a depth-adjustable, inside-neck chamferer (“Controlled Depth Tapered Reaper”) with ultra-sharp cutting flutes. The latest version, which costs $47.00 at KMShooting.com, features a central pin that indexes via the flash hole to keep the cutter centered. In addition, the tool has a newly-designed handle, improved depth-stop fingers, plus a new set-screw adjustment for precise cutter depth control. We caution, even with all the depth-control features, if you are not careful, it is easy to over-cut, slicing away too much brass and basically ruining your neck. We think that most reloaders will get better results using a more conventional chamfer tool, such as the Forster or Redding 15-P.
One last thing to note — tools like the K&M and the Sinclair chamferer are often described as VLD chamferers. That is really a misnomer, as bullets with long boat-tails actually seat easily with very minimal chamfering. In reality, these high-angle chamferers may be most valuable when preparing brass for flat-base bullets and bullets with pressure rings. Using a 22° or 28° chamferer can reduce the risk of cutting a jacket when using VLD bullets though — so long as you make a smooth cut.
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Tags: Case Neck, Chamfer, Deburr, K&M, Pilot, Redding 15-P, Reloading, Rocket Tool, Sinclair
Regrettably, none of the tools with handles support .50 cal. Market opportunity.
https://www.mcmaster.com/#43035A86 Single Cut Carbide Bur with 1/4″ Diameter Shank, Tapered Cone-Radius End, 1-3/16″ Cut Length Head Diameter 5/8″ >> McMaster-Carr has everything
While I am a fan of K&M products in general. The chamfering tool just plain sucks. Very poor design and very easy to ruin good cases. I would use anything else before using this tool.
Paul
Charlie Mac – you missed the key element, “with handles”. Burrs typically have a 1/4″ shank to be used in a drill motor. The Lyman is embedded into the handle and the Redding is a screw-in. I have a call into Brownells/Sinclair to find out the shaft diameter for their handle – which, regrettably, is hard plastic, not soft/ergo.
The wilson micrometer case trimmer has an optional part for chamfering after trimming. Its 100% precise too when used correctly. Makes each case exactly the same. No worry of chamfering deeper or shallower…
Use an aluminum oxide tapered cone.
I looked at most of the de-burring and chamfering tools currently on the market when I needed to replace my very old , worn out tools . I chose to go with the Lyman because every one of them has a excellent “soft” handle , and the cutters , chamfer tools thread into the handle and that makes them replaceable with a carbide up-grade .Looked like the best value for the buck to me . But my twenty-five year old Wilson torpedo type 45 degree tool is still chugging along .