If NONE of your newly made ammo falls out freely, this may be another issue altogether, like the amount of crimp or even a sizing issue. However, if you can turn the barrel with the round in it upside-down, and tap the hand holding the barrel firmly against your other hand, and the round falls out, you should be OK. I had about 10% of my brass acting this way, so I made a box of all those that would 'stick', and fired them slowly one by one. I haven't had a single FTF/FTE so I calmed down at that point, and left it at that OAL.
Try to measure OAL for 40-50 rounds & see how much of a variance you're getting. CeeZer's OAL = 1.085" in HIS CZ is for HIS RN bullet, mine is 1.090 +/- 0.005 for my Shadow AND 124gr AIM RN - but it is 1.095" for Canadian BDX RN. You can use these numbers as a rough guide only - yours WILL be different.
I would also do the barrel test for individual steps, i.e.:
1. Can you drop in/out a sized case freely? If not you may need to size further down.
2. If you seat and crimp in separate steps, do you feel a difference between chambering a seated-only round and a crimped one?
FWIW, I'm using Lee FCD in a separate step, following the advise I was given. Then again, some people think that FCD is for those who don't know how to bell & then seat/crimp properly. I readily admit my lack of expertise - all I know is that FCD gives me this extra assurance.
Try to measure OAL for 40-50 rounds & see how much of a variance you're getting. CeeZer's OAL = 1.085" in HIS CZ is for HIS RN bullet, mine is 1.090 +/- 0.005 for my Shadow AND 124gr AIM RN - but it is 1.095" for Canadian BDX RN. You can use these numbers as a rough guide only - yours WILL be different.
I would also do the barrel test for individual steps, i.e.:
1. Can you drop in/out a sized case freely? If not you may need to size further down.
2. If you seat and crimp in separate steps, do you feel a difference between chambering a seated-only round and a crimped one?
FWIW, I'm using Lee FCD in a separate step, following the advise I was given. Then again, some people think that FCD is for those who don't know how to bell & then seat/crimp properly. I readily admit my lack of expertise - all I know is that FCD gives me this extra assurance.