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12/7/2009 3:55:35 PM EDT
Has anyone had trouble with a Lee deburing and chamfering tool?  mine has about 300 rounds on it and it never has deburred very well.  It seems like I have to take the little burs off with my fingernail on almost every piece of brass.  This is getting to be annoying.
12/7/2009 4:00:51 PM EDT
[#1]
two pulls on the Lee zip trim and a light touch on the brass and its good to go.

The light touch turned out to be the key (and it only works in one direction).
12/7/2009 4:29:20 PM EDT
[#2]
I'm using an battery powered drill and you would think it would zip it right out but I am still getting burrs.  so annoying.  yeah I got it working in the right direction but I may be using too much pressure.
12/7/2009 4:34:56 PM EDT
[#3]
what I found is that too much pressure cuts the brass and continuing to apply pressure continues to cut thereby always leaving a burr (the end of the cut).  probably because the Lee tool is not the most precise cutter lol

a light touch takes off the burrs without creating further cuts.


I may get a Hornady/LE Wilson/Lyman/Everyotherrelaodingcompany tool one of these days lol
12/7/2009 4:37:12 PM EDT
[#4]
Thats probably it!  Tight.  I appreciate it and I will work on it.  Must be an aquired skill.
12/7/2009 4:57:06 PM EDT
[#5]
Which do "you" do first? Chamfer or debur?  This is just a sanity check on my part.  I would think to chamfer and then debur.
12/7/2009 5:03:52 PM EDT
[#6]
Outside then inside then a blue towel inside the neck.

I have to come up with something better to clean up the inside of the neck lol
12/8/2009 4:19:11 AM EDT
[#7]
they work well for the $2 they cost. sounds like its not seperated enough.

stepping up to a powered setup makes it alot easier on the hand.
12/8/2009 9:15:40 AM EDT
[#8]
I should probably spring for a hornady tool or a higher quality one, huh?
12/8/2009 9:32:05 AM EDT
[#9]
While pricey compared to the $3 Lee tool, IMHO, the RCBS trimmer with the 3 way cutter head is the best thing going without stepping up to a Guiard.

Trims to length and chamfers the inside and outside in one step. Adding a power drill or the RCBS power head is icing on the cake....
12/8/2009 4:15:52 PM EDT
[#10]
It wasn't meant to take material off fast, it only removes enough material to break corners.  Because it will cut in either direction, the clearance relief is very moderate, it cuts mostly due to the rake angle.  If you sharpen it by making the cut wider, this will increase the cutting action but also reduce the quality of the cut.
12/9/2009 8:02:48 PM EDT
[#11]
I had the same problem.  It's not you, it's the cheapo Lee tool.  I like lots of Lee stuff but their chamfer/deburring tool is a joke.  Get a Hornady, use it once and you'll chuck the Lee in the trash.
12/9/2009 10:49:54 PM EDT
[#12]
Bought the Lee, hated the Lee.  Switched to a Lyman and could not be happier.  If I were loading hundreds of rounds at a time I would look into the RCBS or Giuad (sp?) but I tend to load 50 to 100 rounds a few times a week so hand fatigue is not much of a concern for me.
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