If you have a fired case that has not been resized try chambering that case for ease of chambering. If it chambers easier than your resized case it could mean your die is not pushing the shoulder back far enough.
Below you can see the case gets "longer" as it is full length resized and squeezes the shoulder forward. And sometimes when the die is making hard contact with the shell holder with press camover the shoulder is still not pushed back far enough. When this happens you will need to lap the top of the shell holder a few thousandths at a time until the case chambers.
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Chambers and dies vary in size and "sometimes" your die does not match your chamber and the case ends up too long after sizing. And then you decrease the hight of the shell holder to push the case further into the die. There is also the possibility the case diameter after sizing is too large, "BUT" most of these chambering problems are cause by the case shoulder not being pushed back far enough.
NOTE, normally when the die matches chamber size the die will push the shoulder back more than needed, and why having the gauge below is good to have.
This is where having a vernier caliper and a Hornady cartridge case headspzes gauge is good to have to measure your unfired, fired and resized cases.
Below measuring a "fired" .223/5.56 case and then setting the die for .003 shoulder bump for my AR15 rifle. Meaning the resized case is .003 shorter than its fired length.
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The older method without gauges was to color the case with a black felt tip marker and see where the color has been rubbed off in chambering.
I was going to say similar if you resized the case improperly it will end up with a long neck but the neck will be low. but ends up longer.
Trimming brass every time is needed. i've over resized before when i was inexperienced with reloading thankfully the casing necks ended up dented and i caught onto it early.
Id personally see if a resized brass without anything chambered closed in the rifle.
if it does then you only have a OAL issue perhaps unknown. but if the cartridge can close properly when chambered then the rest is due to OAL


















































