So...
There's a few videos and some other stuff out there for home made case feeders. I'd appreciate being able to take manual case feeding out of the reloading process on my progressive press (hornady lnl ap).
I'll be working on this over the winter... although the copper plating project comes first.
Some initial thoughts:
I don't wanna build a bullet feeder. I like looking inside each case as well at the powder cop die etc. Bullet feeder *might* come later.
I want it a lot of it built out of plastic, not metal. The reason for this is noise reduction. Sure, it probably won't last for a hundred years, but whatever. Getting things quieter is nice. Tumbling brass won't be really quiet ... but... perhaps adding a lid to the the collator / hopper will reduce that noise too.
Will use an electric motor to spin the hopper. (I debated a hand turn or something based on the RAM movement, but whatever... electric is just simpler).
Want to use a physical micro switch for motor turn off rather than a photo optic. I don't trust optics on a large scale like this, I just don't. It's an easy enough thing to swap out if ya wanna go optic so whatever
. A physical switch might increase the height of the unit, but I don't think so.
The hopper drum seems like it really does need to be fairly large. The brass doesn't seem to fit in the holes/nubbies until around half way up the side of the thingie. 5 gallon bucket sized large. Dunno if I like a 5gal bucket or not since the bottom aint perfectly flat.
Not sure what the angle on the hopper needs to be in order for things to align head down and such. ***EDIT*** looks like 45 degrees will do just fine.
The feed plate attachment stuff that connects to the RAM plate looks to be most difficult to figure out. Construction material will also be weird / interesting. Probably use solid styrene blocks and just drill / cut to desired shape ?
A guide arm thing similar to what's on the primer feed slider will be needed. That is, the bent guide that causes the primer slider shuttle to pull away and then back towards the ram as it's raised and lowered. Something similar will need to be built for the case feeder / pusher. Copper tubing is fairly inexpensive and easy enough to work with... so... maybe.