I haven’t ever seen this mentioned before, so thought I would share my recent experience with you guys.
I finally got started reloading on my lawton 8500 338-408 cheytac build that is a new rifle to me, but its an older rifle build that used to be my gunsmiths long range hunting rig.
He gave me a bunch of multiple fired jamison and a mix of virgin and once fired bertram.
he formed this brass from virgin 408 cheytac brass, which involves the use of multiple bushings to obtain the proper size.
upon tinkering and taking some measurements with some of the brass he gave me I noticed that on all the fired brass, that a bullet would not drop down into the case, not even close, could have easily just loaded a bullet again into them with no sizing.
the neck clearance on the reamer states 372, loaded neck diameter is 364. so 8 thou of clearance should be plenty, what was going on. measured OD of once fired brass is 369, so thought that was a little odd, but still, 5 thou of clearance should still be adequate
I first noticed that the brass from the forming process was quite long, most of it ranging from the maximum reamer spec and some even +10 thou over it.
I thought I had found my issue, the neck was likely butting up against the chamber and was crimping itself over upon firing.
so I trimmed one back, verified with the borescope that there clearance there. should be good to go.
test fired a round, same problem, bullet was still not dropping in.
now i was stumped, and started to think it was an issue with the chamber, maybe the top of the neck area was miscut.
I decided to run a piece of virgin through the amp annealer to see what would happen. Well, found the problem, bullet drops cleanly into fired brass now.
Only thing I can think of is that the maybe the brass wasn’t annealed from the factory, and then the multiple step down bushing ops probably hardened the crap out of the necks and was getting some aggressive spring back.
Whether this would make a difference accuracy/precision wise in this situation, not sure, i don’t plan on testing it. Maybe there was enough clearance upon firing, then the brass was springing back after the bullet left the neck.
I do know from reading on here that you should enough clearance to freely drop a bullet into a once fired piece of brass.
So to me, this is another consideration for making annealing part of your brass prep
I finally got started reloading on my lawton 8500 338-408 cheytac build that is a new rifle to me, but its an older rifle build that used to be my gunsmiths long range hunting rig.
He gave me a bunch of multiple fired jamison and a mix of virgin and once fired bertram.
he formed this brass from virgin 408 cheytac brass, which involves the use of multiple bushings to obtain the proper size.
upon tinkering and taking some measurements with some of the brass he gave me I noticed that on all the fired brass, that a bullet would not drop down into the case, not even close, could have easily just loaded a bullet again into them with no sizing.
the neck clearance on the reamer states 372, loaded neck diameter is 364. so 8 thou of clearance should be plenty, what was going on. measured OD of once fired brass is 369, so thought that was a little odd, but still, 5 thou of clearance should still be adequate
I first noticed that the brass from the forming process was quite long, most of it ranging from the maximum reamer spec and some even +10 thou over it.
I thought I had found my issue, the neck was likely butting up against the chamber and was crimping itself over upon firing.
so I trimmed one back, verified with the borescope that there clearance there. should be good to go.
test fired a round, same problem, bullet was still not dropping in.
now i was stumped, and started to think it was an issue with the chamber, maybe the top of the neck area was miscut.
I decided to run a piece of virgin through the amp annealer to see what would happen. Well, found the problem, bullet drops cleanly into fired brass now.
Only thing I can think of is that the maybe the brass wasn’t annealed from the factory, and then the multiple step down bushing ops probably hardened the crap out of the necks and was getting some aggressive spring back.
Whether this would make a difference accuracy/precision wise in this situation, not sure, i don’t plan on testing it. Maybe there was enough clearance upon firing, then the brass was springing back after the bullet left the neck.
I do know from reading on here that you should enough clearance to freely drop a bullet into a once fired piece of brass.
So to me, this is another consideration for making annealing part of your brass prep
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