You assume the shoulder moves when you 'bump' it.. The first person does not have a chances when he claims he has been reloading for 30 years, if there is any truth in the claim I would have to say some people can be around something all their life's and know nothing about it. Back to 'you assume'; in the beginning it was not the shoulder that bumped, it was the press. In the beginning there were two types of presses, one was cam over press. The cam over press was called a 'bump press'. And then there was the other press, the non-cam over press; the non cam over press did not bump.
The RCBS A2 was a cam over press, it was a bump press, I could ask how much bump did the A2 have but first I would have to explain what 'bump' means. I have 3 Rock Chuckers, none of my Rock Chuckers cam over meaning they are not bump presses. And then reloaders call RCBS and explain to them what this mean old man said about the Rock Chucker. I have at least 12 presses that are bump presses, by design the bump was necessary for two reasons.
And then there were instructions, I have two sets from RCBS, one set describes the cam over press and die adjustment, the other describes die adjustment for the non cam over press. What was the difference?
F. Guffey
Frank, Dude - you gotta get your facts straight !!!
Cam-over, and Bump have nothing to do with each other.
On "Cam-over"...
"C-frame" presses. The C-frame press is an early part of reloading history. They were flexible and sprung like a rubber ducky. But in the early days, the need for a loading press was only to save money loading - no one formed cases or wildcats with C-frame presses. "Wildcats" were NOT made by pushing and squishing shoulders around in a press, they were formed by blowing out shoulders in the chamber - the AI case.
The C-frame, like slavery and the Indian massacres, was a dark period in American reloading history, and is best forgotten.
In 1949, the C-frame died. In 1949, Fred Huntington freed us from that darkness by inventing the model "A" press - it was the very first "O-frame" press. It was designed for reloading, AND bullet swaging, because most varmint and accuracy shooters in those days, made their own bullets. He was smart and patented the design, and made O-frame presses (and royalties from all the other press manufacturers), and great dies, and lived happily ever after.
All
"O" frame presses that I have used, owned, or visited at a friends are "Cam over", and this goes back to the original "A" and "A2". Cam over means that the linkage that drives the ram, first makes the ram go up to the top of the stroke, and then goes a bit further, so the ram starts going down again - then the linkage hits a stop.
ALL "O" frame presses do this - it is inherent in the design.
RCBS, CH, Redding, Lyman, Hornady, and the rest, have never made an O-frame press that is not capable of "camming-over". If you have RockChucker presses that are not capable of cam-over, they have been modified (to their detriment)... or maybe you just don't understand how to use that feature.
When you set up dies, and screw a sizing die down to meet the ram and lock it in place, you are not using the cam-over feature. When you full length size a case, the case will cause the O-frame to flex, so the case will not go all the way in. SO... we use the cam-over abilities fof the press, by when the die is screwed down to meet the ram, we lower the ram and screw the die in further by 1/8th to maybe 1/2 a turn, and lock it in place.
Now, when we run the press handle down (and the ram goes up), we hit the die and feel resistance - as we continue, the O-frame starts to stretch up, and as the linkage goes over "top-dead-center", the handle continues down on it's own force as the O-frame stretch starts to unload it's stress back into the ram and linkage.
At the bottom of the stroke, the press will remain lightly locked in place. This ability to cam-over assures that the case will be completely sized, even when the frame flexes a bit.
THAT, Frank, is "Cam-over"... you have it, even if you are not using it.
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On "Bumping"...
"The RCBS A2 was a cam over press, it was a bump press,...".
Bumping is NOT a feature of presses, ANY presses. It is done by the dies. And it could never be attributed to the "A" and A2" presses (or any other press - for that matter, you could bump with an old C-frame press).
"Bumping" is a newish word in the handloading lexicon. I think it started showing up maybe 8 to 10-ish years ago. It originally meant to just nudge the shoulder - like you might "bump" someone's car in the parking lot, as opposed to damaging it.
Like a lot of misused words in handloading, it has morphed to now mean anything that has to do with sizing the shoulder. So when a newbee takes his oversize and overly long case from his $300 Savage factory chamber, and shoves it into a SAAMI minimum FL sizing die, he thinks (and says) that he is "bumping" the shoulder." (Gag... double Gag)
None the less - bumping, for experienced shooters means just nudging the shoulder 1 or 2 or 3 thou, and you control the amount by how much you screw in the bump die... or you can control the amount by using Redding Comp shell holders (which is how I do it).
So, Frank - we all know that you have some very strange opinions on reloading, but could do us a favor and at least use the same language as the rest of the world... in the cause of better communication.