In 1914 the British reamed the chambers on their Enfield rifles larger in diameter and longer to the shoulder location to make room for the "Mud of Flanders Fields". Meaning the military chamber is longer and fatter than American SAAMI specifications. Also American SAAMI .303 British cartridge cases are not made to British military standards.
It all started when we Americans thumbed our nose at King George and dumped British tea in Boston harbor. Also after our independence we changed how we spell color and moved the automobiles steering wheel to the other side of the car and made our football players wear protective head gear.
The only concession the U.S. made was to Canada during prohibition, we agreed to play that silly game of Hockey on our side of the border in return for Canadian whiskey.
When the British adopted the metric system the .303 British case was one of the first casualties and American cartridge case manufacturers couldn't figure out where to put the shoulder of the case. (read the story of the "Enfield Inch")
The metric system is so screwed up our American made cases will have the shoulder of the case pushed back too far when full length resized.
All humor aside, the fired case below is now resting on its shoulder, and the amount the case is sticking above the Wilson case gauge is how far the shoulder will be pushed back when full length resizing.
Use the smallest o-ring you can find and
grease your locking lugs to prevent galling and wear when fire forming your cases. When the o-ring is compressed it flattens out and centers the case in the rear of the chamber which will aid in accuracy when forming the case. American made cases run on the small side in base diameter and will actually lay in the bottom of the chamber and out of alignment with the axis of the bore.
After fire forming the case will headspace on the shoulder and not the rim and thus hold the case against the bolt face and the o-ring will not be needed.
Also you can use a .303 British case forming and trim die as a shoulder bump die and it will not touch the case body or neck when your cases get too long and the bolt is hard to close.
Below is a once fired factory loaded Winchester case that was fired in a No.4 Enfield rifle with the headspace set at just under .067 and within SAAMI headspace limits. The case stretched and thinned .009 on the first firing, and my point being the case can stretch to meet the bolt face "AND" outward to meet the chamber walls. Meaning headspace, chamber diameter and the cartridge case base diameter affects how much the case will stretch and thin when fired and why the o-ring helps.
The British Enfield rifle doesn't have a headspace problem, the real problem started when we Americans dumped British tea in Boston harbor and didn't make our .303 cases to British military standards.
I don't play Hockey and drink the best beer made in North America.......Bazinga
The Enfield rifle below had its headspace adjusted from .006 under minimum to .010 over maximum military headspace. If you have a good tight fitting bolt head that does not over rotate just use the o-ring method for fire forming your cases.
Besides those rotten Canadians are hiding all the No.3 bolt heads anyway.