Fully fireformed.brass will certainly tell you what the headspace is. Headspace is kind of a mute point with experienced reloaders. As long as it isn't so excessive that it causes case head separation on the first firing. Saami specs no longer have any validity once you have fully fireformed brass.
You use a headspace gauge on fully fireformed brass, and it isn't fully fireformed until all the cases in that group have the same measurement, and bump that shoulder no more than 1 or 2 thousands. If you size to saami or some case gauge your brass won't last for $&!.
As for OAL. Use your stoney point and find the lands. That is.your max unless you are limited to mag. Length. Just remember you must measure with each bullet type you use with the stoney point. No two bullet types will have the same measurement
SAAMI is about as meaningless as MIL SPEC.
For all the time , money and gadgets you have ,dig a little deeper and buy a headspace gauge . Stop chasing your tail , I'd full length size all brass or resize enough to close easily . Trust your smith . If he said it was within specs and you didn't specify that you wanted a min chamber , he did you a big favor by redoing his work .
Your reloading procedures need some guidance and I don't mean via Internet videos or answers .
For all the time , money and gadgets you have ,dig a little deeper and buy a headspace gauge . Stop chasing your tail , I'd full length size all brass or resize enough to close easily . Trust your smith . If he said it was within specs and you didn't specify that you wanted a min chamber , he did you a big favor by redoing his work .
Your reloading procedures need some guidance and I don't mean via Internet videos or answers .
I believe you are referring to this: https://www.midwayusa.com/product/477756/rcbs-precision-mic-223-Remington
I don't really care!
i think that answer by ireload was meant for guffey.I don't really care!
No one asked you but I guess you would be helpless if you had 15 rifles that fired the same round.
Whether or not you know enough to understand, there are sound reasons for engineering standards. Some people and governments own more than one rifle in a particular caliber and they need ammo to fit all of them all the time. Your "made to fit" each rifle loading technique will not get it done in a fashion suitable for combat logistics.
I understand about a case. May be a poor choice of words. Many reloaders may not have had the chamber cut or may not know the actual headspace in the chamber. I do have and use go/no-go headspace gauges. Again, a lot of people don't have them. As far as measuring from a fireformed case. I just had a slight overpressure incident when I had a harder bolt lift and a slightly stuck case. This one measured just .001" longer than the rest of them I set my F/L die to set the shoulder no more than .001" under the average fired case.The case does not have head space, I wonder what it is reloaders do not understand about the chamber, when I cut a chamber I know the length of the chamber from the datum/shoulder to the bolt face. A reloader with a good understanding of reloading should know the length of the chamber from the datum/shoulder to the bolt face before they leave for the range. And then there are fire formers, I form first then fire.
F. Guffey
Yes that's the oneI believe you are referring to this: https://www.midwayusa.com/product/477756/rcbs-precision-mic-223-Remington
Yes that's the one
Brownells , midway , and ptg sells them . Go /no go gauges .
Thanks Richard !
Negatory
He needs.to measure.his.brass not.headspace his.rifle.
if he wants.to check and see if his headspace.is excessive he needs the no go or.better yet the field gauge[/QUOTE
I'll clarify. He needs both the go and no go gauge. If the no go gauge goes, he's got his problem. Measuring brass is a hit or miss situation. If the chamber is too long headspace wise and his loads are mild, the brass may not fireform and give an accurate measurement. In any event, with new brass I would not put any faith in measuring it until it's been fired two or three times. The no go or field gauge will tell all though.
Yes , I understand and agree . Sometimes we get an idea in our head and must learn for ourselves that our procedure is wrong not the rifle . That's all I'm saying , he's already taken it back to his smith once and still is having same problem .But at this point your chamber headspace is what it is. So what if it is.a.bit of a wildcat. Just make your brass to fit your chamber.
My bet is the bolt will close.on the go and won't on the.no go which is really SAMMI max. For.sure.it won't close on the field.
To the OP, did you deprime the cases before you measured them? If not that is a large part of your variance. This should not be that hard. When I was forming my 6.5x47 brass to have my sizing dies made i just tapped a neck bushing over the neck with a hammer, removed it with a vice grip pliers then loaded the brass and fired it. I fired 3 pieces of brass 3 times. Measured after depriming with a Hornady comparator there was less than .001 variance. I first made the mistake of measuring before depriming and there was about .005 variance.
Dennis
Yes , I understand and agree . Sometimes we get an idea in our head and must learn for ourselves that our procedure is wrong not the rifle . That's all I'm saying , he's already taken it back to his smith once and still is having same problem .