Anyway, my dummy loads were 350 grainers that I cast from a 457192 mould, and I noticed that when I set the 45-60 round next to a .45 Colt casing, the .45 Colt case mouth came up to almost the same spot on the .45-60 case where the base of that 350 grainer would be. So I ran the 45-60 dummy round up through a .45 Colt Lee Factory Crimp die. That left a crimp behind the bullet, and that has prevented setback. The photos aren't the best, and the dummy round was getting pretty chewed up before I tried crimping behind the bullet.


Now, I realize that I could just stick a dowel of the proper length into the case the next time I make dummy rounds, but it got me to thinking. Bullet setback is a real concern for those folks using smokeless in these cavernous cases when their bullets don't have a crimp grove. And using a .45 Colt Lee Factory Crimp die to put a crimp behind the bullet might be just the ticket to preventing setback with those less-than-case-filling smokeless loads. It does work the brass more, and I don't know if annealing before each reloading would prevent it from shortening case life, but it might be worth experimenting with. Has anyone tried this?