Just set your die up to bump the shoulders .001-.0015 on fired cases. Now, the die is set for your chamber...no need to adjust the die every time. Once the die is set, the brass is the variable that you control, not the die.
Make sure you remove the primers before checking as fired primers can add .002-.003 to your base-to-datum dimension. Check the b-d dimension every firing at first and get a feel for how the brass acts in your particular chamber. After a few firings, if the shoulder won't stay where you bump it, just lightly stress relieve the area and continue on.
Good shootin'.

-Al
P.S. It's not
head space you're controlling.
Head space is the dimension from the front of the bolt face to the datum line in the
chamber. It's a fixed, finite, dimension.
What we control with the die is the
base-to-datum dimension of the
case. This
B-D dimension determines the clearance between the case and the chambers datum point.