I appreciate you guys taking the time to reply to my question, I really do; but when you reply without reading the previous posts you end up asking the same questions over and over and over again. I swear to god, in this thread, I have been asked 4 times if my brass was trimmed and at least 3 times if my bullets were hitting the rifling.
I don't mind really except for 3 things.
Replying with questions that have already been asked pretty much just wastes YOUR time.
It fills the thread up so other people are less likely to read the whole thread and, in turn, do the same thing; ask questions that have already been asked.
Makes me roll my eyes and ignore the post, which makes me feel bad because you've taken the time to try to help me out.
The worst is when people ask a question and the answer to that question is in the first line of the OP lol.
Wally, as others have said you MAY have your seating die too low, but those rounds appear just fine. FYI, you could lower your sizing die if you want, you are presently only sizing about half the neck.
If it is not from the seating die, the reason you are finding those rounds tight to chamber is because you are only partially sizing the brass. I partial neck size or neck size all my reloads, including rounds for my No. 1's; they are ALL tight to chamber, this is because the shoulder has not been bumped back.
If factory or full length sized rounds are tight to chamber, then you have an issue. Partial/neck sized ammo should be somewhat difficult to chamber.
Yeah, I was thinking I could lower the FL die too. Could probably be sizing that brass by another .0625"
I'm sure you're right about that except my stuff is once fired. The unsized OF brass chambers with no resistance. The problem was that my seating die was too low.
Here's an idea for future loads. Get yourself a proper bushing neck sizing die.
I have, in the past, done partial neck sizing with a FL die, but it is not the same. If you feel resistance when chamber, who knows where the shoulder is lining the bullet up in relation to the bore. Bullet runout will not matter at this point if the shoulder is causing the bullet to be sitting canted to the rifling.
Yeah. I think i'm gonna have to.
I did the same thing on a batch of 20 rounds for my .338F...but I didn't know and drove all the way to the pit (30 mins one way)

. The look on my face was priceless when I realized that there would be no shooting that day

.
You musta mushed em worse than I did

That's sucks even more than forgetting your mags lol
The reason for the blow-ups is the doughnut-effect.
This is an interesting theory. I've never heard it before. I don't think that it's my problem, especially since my brass is once fired but I'll keep that in mind.
Cheers.