- Location
- Hillbilly shack in the boonies
Trash the cases, check the head space on the 06,
Regarding m14's, I know it's off topic, but Hungry told me to do the same while everyone else except some rare individuals advocated the opposit
as of right now I FL size the brass, still clueless about what's best
Excessive headspace causes head seperation, not excess pressure.
The excessive headspace obviously came about by your over resizing the cases.
With my most recent dies, Redding the instructions were to set the shell holder to the base of the die, then back it out one-half turn. Now resize, and if it fits the rifle easily, okay. If not, keep working it in in small increments until it chambers easily.
Mine chambered easily at the half turn back-off.
I just wondered why you go through all the trouble of measuring all your brass and writting on it. Have you considered setting your trimmer and trimming all of it equally? I have never taken the time to write on my brass; I just set the trimmer and do all of them to the same length and go from there.
Havent seen your method before.
As for the .243 brass... how old is it? In years, not firings. I have heard of brass age-hardening after being stored for many years.
hey goose I read somewhere that you can;t drive the barnes solid copper bullets as fast as the others because they will foul your barrel and cause excess pressure . I have some loaded in PMC brass I picked up at a gunshow and looked at the ballistics on the back of the box and thought to myself this load sucks for 270 win . I was going to reload them then I read an article in guns and ammo that said you can;t drive them as fast ???? contact barnes and ask them their opinion . that;s all I can remember as it was a while ago I read the article .
Full Length sizing = short brass life.
Set your dies so you just bump the shoulder enough to facilitate easy chambering. Less if you dont mind a bit of a mushy felling on bolt closure.
If you cant get at least 6 loadings from a single piece of brass after setting your dies this way, your loading too hot.
Better yet, don't bump the shoulder at all. I adjust my f/l dies just enough so i can chamber the case reliably and no more.
I think the problem here is a combination of max chamber dimensions, over-resizing, and hottish loads. Buy a neck sizing die or learn to adjust the full length dies to neck size only. FlL sizing just isn't required in a bolt action with a concentric chamber.