....Contact with the shell holder plus 1/4 turn made all of my 308 brass run nicely through the tikka (and the winchester)! but the 7.62 still would not chamber. Another 1/4 turn and all the former 7.62 now chambers easily! It must have been a tolerances issue with the Lee dies as many of you have said, but I am glad these RCBS dies will work for me. My only question now becomes: should I size all of the 308 stamped brass at 1/4 turn and the 7.62 at 1/2 turn or just do them all at 1/2 for the sake of consistency?.........
The 1/4 turn is a suggested setting, each model of press has it's strength and stretch spec, they are not all the same. My RCBS Summit has instructions that suggest more than a 1/4 turn, to take up the slack, just a design characteristic of the press.
You will probably find that a 1/4 turn will be adequate the next time you reload the 1F brass.
Nothing wrong with going 1/2 with all, but before I'd do that I'd clean the 1F brass after you size it 1/4, re-lube and give it a second sizing. My reasoning being, that 1/2 turn, depending on the press, "may" stress it a bit more than it should be. That being said, presses will take a heck of a lot of abuse before they "spring". I've purchased used presses, looked good, only to realize they were sprung. Oft times, buying used reloading tools, is false economy.
It's been my experience that LEE dies, as a rule, don't over re-size, they usually size below cartridge max. and some will be near cartridge min, but seldom smaller than cartridge min. Other brands tend to size smaller than a LEE. I would not hesitate to buy any brand, all good, some cost more and are better made, but bottom line, short of getting a custom die made, sometimes an off the shelf one will be right for your gun. I have purchased several dies to find one that is best for my rifle, still cheaper than getting a custom die made, but it doesn't always work. My tickle trunk has a few die sets that are there only to rob pieces from, or modify to do stupid stuff when the mood strikes.
My choice of dies sometimes centers around how they seat bullets, and here there is a huge design difference. Some brands seat bullets better than others. Some brands crimp better than others.
Nitro