I was loading .308 range brass the past few weeks and at the range I discovered that alot of the casings were VERY hard to chamber (in 2 instances, impossible) in my Marlin XL7. I could almost completely chamber the round, but locking the bolt was the very difficult part.
Some research and investigation and I discovered that my Lee Full Length Sizing die is the likely culprit - specifically, that I did not screw it in all the way (Lee recommends screwing it in until the die contacts the case plate, with the ram raised, than screwing it in 1/4 to 1/3 turn more).
I think I also FL resized several hundred .223 cases as well, where my die wasn't screwed in sufficiently.
Thing is, with the .223's - they're only being fired from my Nork AR's and SU-16. I haven't had any problems with my existing test fires, but I'd like some reassurance from anyone if they think I should have any problems with this brass (and if it merits another FL resize?).
Does anyone know if the SU-16 and Nork AR chambers have a pretty forgiving tolerance?
Some research and investigation and I discovered that my Lee Full Length Sizing die is the likely culprit - specifically, that I did not screw it in all the way (Lee recommends screwing it in until the die contacts the case plate, with the ram raised, than screwing it in 1/4 to 1/3 turn more).
I think I also FL resized several hundred .223 cases as well, where my die wasn't screwed in sufficiently.
Thing is, with the .223's - they're only being fired from my Nork AR's and SU-16. I haven't had any problems with my existing test fires, but I'd like some reassurance from anyone if they think I should have any problems with this brass (and if it merits another FL resize?).
Does anyone know if the SU-16 and Nork AR chambers have a pretty forgiving tolerance?


















































