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Can you chamber factory loaded ammo?
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I dont understand this, "one of them is "bound" to be full length" If you cant identify the die throw it away. You cant find the cause with stuff you dont know what it is.Yes. I would hope so, considering I have two different manufacture die sets one of them is bound to be full length. And as per my OP at first my uncle and I thought I was getting deep enough to the shoulder so we screwed the die body further into the press making a top of the stroke press not possible because the case is in there. At that point we just became puzzled as all hell.
This is worth looking into... (no pun intended but I'll take it...You could be building a big carbon ring right at the edge of the neck. Fiber optic borescopes are pretty cheap now. Have a look.
It's just fired brass that I've resized and I'm putting it in the receiver and closing the bolt.Describe the scratching please. Is it longitudinal? Where on the case is it located, etc.?
Use a properly sized chamber brush to clean the chamber and try again?
Pictures would be helpful. If the ejector is still in the bolt that may be normal scraping.
Are you feeding from the magazine (which might account for the scratching) or sliding the case into the chamber directly then trying to finish chambering with the bolt?
Besides the scratching, where is the actual hang up occurring? Is it the neck,, shoulder, somewhere on the case body? If so where on the case body?
Did you see the gouges in the brass he tried to chamber?I don't think it is a chamber problem. Some of his brass chambers OK after FL resizing. Only his brass from the 700 doesn't chamber in the 77 after FL resizing. See post #5.
All neck dies I've seen say "NK"or "Neck" on them somewhere.
How many times have the 700 cases been reloaded? Maybe they are springing back a bit after sizing and so need annealing.
Bruce
But he didn't mention any on the cases that did chamber.Did you see the gouges in the brass he tried to chamber?
Unless there is a big carbon ring or something hard enough to scratch brass in the chamber. Get a bore scope and have a proper look.Theres no logical reason brass fired in one rifle then resized in a full length die would not fit another rifle of the same caliber.
What is the untrimmed case overall length after resizing?Whats the trim length after FL sizing?
Brass is once fired batch of factory ammo of a variety of manufacturers ranging from Hornady to Remington an Sierra.What is the untrimmed case overall length after resizing?
None. This is the first they've been shot and ran through the press which is why I'm so confused as to how it's such a problem.I don't think it is a chamber problem. Some of his brass chambers OK after FL resizing. Only his brass from the 700 doesn't chamber in the 77 after FL resizing. See post #5.
All neck dies I've seen say "NK"or "Neck" on them somewhere.
How many times have the 700 cases been reloaded? Maybe they are springing back a bit after sizing and so need annealing.
Bruce
I'm not backing the die off that's the thing. And when I bought the sets I bought them brand new at the store. On the the box FULL LENGTH. I didn't just go to a gun store a found some rusted dies and them with WD40 to knock the rust off.I dont understand this, "one of them is "bound" to be full length" If you cant identify the die throw it away. You cant find the cause with stuff you dont know what it is.
Regarding FL die setup... I would stop backing the die off, set it up per its instructions (screw it down all the way) and dont mess with shoulder bumping. A properly set up FL die will size the case slightly smaller than saami spec, if that sized case doesnt fit then the problem is in the guns chamber.
Also the trim question. When you size a case the mandrel also sizes the neck ID, as the neck ID is being expanded it causes the case length to grow. If it grows too much past saami spec then it wont chamber. You need to measure this and know this isnt part of the problem.
Shoulder bumping doesnt straighten a bullet out.I'm not backing the die off that's the thing. And when I bought the sets I bought them brand new at the store. On the the box FULL LENGTH. I didn't just go to a gun store a found some rusted dies and them with WD40 to knock the rust off.
Calipers says brass is fine. All in spec. The reason my uncle and I shoulder bump is because even with factory ammo the bullet is somewhat seated at an oblique angle.
By shoulder bumping it straightens that bullet out when you go to seat so it's near perfect in the chamber. He said in the old books the bench resters found this improved accuracy immensely. Every handload he makes with that method produced dime size groups for every gun he's ever made them for.