I have opened up several barrels for more neck clearance to be on the safe side..
Have your smith fix them...and I know its a big hassle after the fact.
He should have got it right the first time.
I agree that a worn reamer could have caused this but not twice on two different rifles with different chambers. I doubt that a chamber neck that is merely .001" over the neck diameter of the provided factory ammo is still within SAMMI specs but I'm not a gunsmith. I also think that a neck that tight should have the neck diameter stamped right on the barrel under the chamber designation. Not doing so seems dangerous because if I sold the rifle and someone used ammo that was only .001" larger in neck diameter it sure wouldn't be good.I don't think member rwj was making an excuse for your situation merely a possible explanation. I personally had a situation where a possible worn reamer worked to my advantage. I had a factory heavy barrel Savage in 223 that shot way better than I ever had seen before. After we cast the chamber and took measurements we found the dimensions to be on the minimum side rather than on the generous side. My gunsmith chalked it up to a worn reamer. I realize my experience does nothing to help your situation and I hope you get your problem sorted out.
For now, it's just a matter of neck turning off .001" all the way around to get to the .003" of release that seems safe and reasonable for a hunting rifle but I specifically indicated that I did not want to turn brass and provided the Nosler factory ammo. You live & you learn.