Home > Corbin > Firearms accessories > Corbin RBTL-4-M Die Set Instruction Manual

Corbin RBTL-4-M Die Set Instruction Manual

    Download as PDF Print this page Share this page

    Have a look at the manual Corbin RBTL-4-M Die Set Instruction Manual online for free. It’s possible to download the document as PDF or print. UserManuals.tech offer 50 Corbin manuals and user’s guides for free. Share the user manual or guide on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

    							How to Swage Bullets Using TheRBTO-4-M, -S, or -H Die Set
    Type -H dies fit into the ram of the Corbin Mega-Mite press (CSP-2), Corbin
    Hydro, Jr., (CSP-2H) press, and the Corbin Hydro-Press (CHP-1). The type -
    M dies fit either the horizontal Silver Press (CSP-3) or the vertical Series II
    Press (CSP-1). The type -S dies fit only the Series II Press (CSP-1). The last
    letter, -M, -S, or -H, describes the outside diameter, threads, punch lengths,
    and which presses the die set will fit. If a tool fits both the -S and the -M
    systems and there would be no difference in it for either of them (such as
    punch holders or draw dies), then the -M designation is used.
    The 4-die set consists of a CORE SWAGE (CSW-1), a BOAT-TAIL PREFORM
    (BT-1), a REBATED BOATTAIL FINISHER (BT-2), and a POINT FORM (PF-1)
    die, each with one internal and one external punch, except the two rebated
    boattail dies share the same external core seating punch.
    An EXTERNAL PUNCH is held in the FLOATING PUNCH HOLDER (FPH-1-
    M or FPH-1-H), which comes with the press and screws down into the top
    plate of the press.  For the -M and -S external punches under 3/8-inch caliber,
    a threaded bushing and steel ring are removed from the bottom of the punch
    holder, placed over the external punch, and then screwed back into the bot-
    tom of the punch holder to secure the punch. The punch holder screws into
    the press head, so the punch faces the ram. For -M and -S punches from 3/8-
    inch up, the bushing and ring are part of the punch assembly. For -H external
    punches, only a threaded bushing is used, without the steel ring. The external
    punch is the TOP punch in these systems.
    The die screws into the press ram, with its INTERNAL PUNCH inside the
    ram. Some internal punches require the use of spring powered retraction: for
    the PF-1-H die, the internal punch is called an EJECTION PIN punch, and it
    will have a quarter inch diameter hole through the head portion, through which
    a 1/4-inch diameter retraction pin fits. The pin goes below the large spring
    around the press ram, and pushes down on the pin, which then pushes the
    punch down when the ram is raised, making it easier to insert material into
    the die. For the PF-1-M and PF-1-S dies, a notch is machined into the head of
    the internal punch, which matches a removable pin with knurled head pushed
    into the front (CSP-1) or top (CSP-3) of the press. This is the STOP PIN. It
    presses on the tail all punches except for the ejection pin punch, to cause
    ejection on the down stroke. Because the PF-1 die would form the bullet around
    this pin if the pin were allowed to remain in the die cavity during swaging, the
    stop pin must be put into the notch and used to keep the pin retracted from
    the cavity during swaging, holding it firmly during the down stroke to cause
    ejection of the bullet.
    In the -H system, a knock-out or ejection bar goes through a slot in the press
    ram, below the spring and also below the retraction pin (if one is required—
    not all punches have a hole through the head). The knock-out bar supports
    the head of the internal punch while the component is being swaged, and
    comes to rest on the press mounting plate on the downward stroke. This stops
    the movement of the bar while the ram continues down, making the punch
    stop moving while the die goes down with the ram.The RBT deflects
    muzzle gas so it
    does not focus in
    front of the bullet,
    as with the
    standard boattail.Stop Pin
    (CSP-1 or
    CSP-3 press)
    fits the slot in
    the ejection
    pin punch
    head.External
    Punch
    Internal
    PunchInternal
    ejection
    pin
    punch,
    PF PF-1
    Point
    Form
    Die External
    RBT PF
    Punch, is
    used ONLY
    to push
    the RBT
    bullet into
    the PF die.
    Any other
    use may
    destroy it.CSW-1
     Core Swage: adjust lead core
    weight and shape.BT-1
     Boattail Preformer: seats the
    lead core into the jacket and formsthe start of the boattail section.Same external punch is used in thenext die...BT-2
     Rebated Boattail Finisher: seats
    the lead core again and forms therebate shoulder on the boattail.Internal punch is a loose fit, onlyused to eject the bullet.PF-1 
    Point Former: forms the ogive
    curve on the bullet. Usethe RBT external punch.External
    Punches are
    held in the
    press HEAD
    using the
    Floating Punch
    Holder. 
    						
    							Never try to swage a component that will not go into
    the die by hand. The swaging operation depends on each
    component being slightly smaller than the die bore, and
    increases the bullet diameter a little with every step. The
    core seating die and point forming die are matched to each
    other for a given jacket and core material to within 0.0005
    to .0010 inches with the core seater being smaller.
    The first die is the CORE SWAGE (CSW-1). It is
    used to form a piece of lead to precise diameter, length and
    weight. There are three bleed holes through the sides of the
    die, and its punches are very close fits to the die bore. They
    are the smallest punches in the set and only fit this die prop-
    erly. Always make sure the punch fits the die by hand be-
    fore applying pressure to it with the press!
    For power presses, set the bottom sensor so the pres-
    sure stops (red LED on the sensor goes on) just as the
    swaged core is ejected (internal punch even with the top of
    the die). Use a knock-out bar that allows the punch to come
    just to the die face, if you have more than one height of bar
    with your press (CSP-2 hand press uses three different
    heights of bars for various punch and die lengths). Make
    sure your hand press is in the SHORT STROKE (swaging)
    position: the CSP-1 and CSP-2 presses have dual stroke pivot
    holes for the ram/toggle linkage and you cannot swage in
    the long or reloading stroke (it may break the stop pin to
    try).
    You can use cut lead wire, or a cast lead core. Apply a
    small amount of Corbin Swage Lube to the cores as you
    handle them. Set the floating punch holder so the desired
    amount of lead is left in the die when the press stops mov-
    ing up (position of the top sensor controls top of stroke on
    hydraulic presses, physical end of ram travel is fixed on hand
    press). Always extrude at least 1-2 grains from each core,
    or else you will not achieve consistent weight control. But
    do not extrude more than about 10 grains, as this only wastes
    time and raises the swaging pressure unnecessarily.
    After making the desired number of cores, clean them
    in hot water to remove the swage lube, then let them dry
    and insert them into bullet jackets (if jackets are used).
    The BT-1 Boattail Preformer is the second die  in
    a RBT die set. It will accept the jacket for its caliber easily
    but closely, and has no bleed holes. The BT-2 looks similar,
    but is marked with the BT-2 designation. The bore size of
    the BT-1 is slightly smaller than that of the BT-2.  The inter-
    nal punch for the BT-1 die is a loose fit in the die; it serves
    ONLY to push the bullet out, and plays no part in forming
    the base.
    Select a diameter of external punch that fits the jacket
    ID at the point where you want the core to be after seating.
    Thicker jackets, and lighter cores in tapered jackets, both
    require a larger diameter external punch than thinner jack-
    ets or heavier bullets with a tapered commercial jacket. (See
    Corbin Handbook for discussion of proper core/jacket/
    punch fitting).
     The correct core seating pressure is normally in the
    300 to 500 PSI range. This can vary with the particular cali-
    ber, jacket thickness, and other features of the bullet, so
    follow any written instructions provided with the die regard-ing the suggested pressure. Always start with the pressure
    in a low setting on the hydraulic presses (300 to 500 psi)
    and increase slowly until the jacket expands to just under
    the diameter you get with a swaged pure lead slug in the
    die. Any greater pressure than this will only stress the die
    and could bend punches or break dies.
    Apply a small amount of swaging lube to the outside
    of each jacket as you pick it up to insert in the die; the amount
    that you get by rolling a drop between finger and thumb is
    sufficient in most cases. Lubricant should not be allowed
    inside the jacket: that is why the cores were washed clean
    before insertion into the jackets.
    The third die is the REBATED BOATTAIL FIN-
    ISHER (BT-2). Note that the combination of the BT-1, BT-2,
    and the external RBT punch for the PF-1 die is also packaged
    as the RBT-2 ADD-ON SET, for adding the RBT design to
    existing flat base die sets. Use the same external punch (core
    seating) that you used with the previous step. Push the bul-
    let base first into the die, and apply enough pressure so that
    a shoulder is formed clearly at the junction of the boattail
    and the bullet shank (full diameter portion). This small shoul-
    der is the spoiler that breaks up laminar flow of muzzle
    gas so it cannot focus itself in front of the bullet, gaining up
    to 15 percent better accuracy than a conventional boattail
    with all other factors equal. The shoulder formed in this die
    must match the cavity of the external point form punch. If it
    is too long or short, a double shoulder may be created in
    the final step.
    The fourth die is the POINT FORMER (PF-1-H).
    It shapes the ogive curve on the bullet and gives the bullet
    its final diameter. This die has a bullet-shaped hole. The
    diameter of the point form die itself is usually NOT the same
    as the bullet, and is designed to match the core seater, the
    jacket material and thickness, and the lead hardness. Using
    materials other than those for which the set was designed
    can change the bullet diameter and may cause the bullet to
    stick or become hard to eject.
    The external punch has a cavity matching the boattail
    angle and shoulder depth. Make sure that the bullet is short
    enough so that the entire punch tip is well within the die
    cavity before any pressure is created. If the punch walls are
    not supported fully by the die, the punch will crack when
    pressure is applied. Making too heavy a bullet for the length
    of the PF-1 die cavity may break the external punch.
    When installing the internal punch, make absolutely
    sure that the internal ejection pin punch is held by the stop
    pin (in -M or -S systmes) or retraction pin (in -H systems).
    Otherwise the pin may fall out of the die hole and be col-
    lapsed by the end of the die when the ram goes down, roll-
    ing it like a pretzel inside the ram. Shape the bullet by care-
    fully raising the ram and pushing the nose end of the bullet
    down into the die.
    Eject, examine, and re-adjust until the tip is formed to
    the desired amount of closure, but do not try to close it
    smaller than the size of the ejection pin! Never force jacket
    material up into the ejection pin hole: doing so will concen-
    trate force in such a small area that it can crack the die.
    Remember, we are dealing with rifle chamber pressures in
    these swaging dies, when the press goes over center. 
    						
    All Corbin manuals Comments (0)

    Related Manuals for Corbin RBTL-4-M Die Set Instruction Manual