Thank you. I'm definitely taking all this into consideration, and will be adjusting my crimp before loading any further rounds.
I need to uniform my OAL on the cases, I think. On one bullet, it will be seated correctly at the cannelure, the next may be a shorter case, like pictured, then one correct, then one that may be too long and completely covers the cannelure. Its brand new Starline brass, and I wanted to fire it all before trimming to see if there would be any growth on the cases or not.
With regards to polishing the rod in my sizing die, would the flare that the powder die gives the case mouth not negate any smaller tension placed on the case by a smaller sizing rod?
LC
Keep in mind that pistol brass shortens as it is shot, which is the opposite of rifle brass which tends to elongate. Unless you are shooting Bullseye and are very good, you aren't going to notice any difference by trimming cases. Go low tech - Just stand them upright and if there is a noticeable height difference then separate out the obvious oddballs.
Your biggest handicap is the 4" barrel. The 357Mag was designed for +6" barrels. Unfortunately, you can't get a complete powder burn with W296 loading to max. charges per reloading manuals and can't reach the velocities. Your best answer is to change your mindset and load to your specific gun. Reduce amount of W296 powder to only amount that you can effectively burn inside your gun. There are two easy ways to determine this threshold:
1) Shoot at a white sheet to determine amount of excess/unused powder being thrown out end of barrel; or
2) Measure velocity to determine at what powder charge the velocity starts to decrease (easiest technique)
Improve you neck tension/crimp will improve some burn rate, but you will never burn a full load of powder. After you have dialed in your neck tension/crimp, begin reducing the amount of powder in the cartridge until the point where the velocity begins to decrease. Start at your 15.0gr charge and load 6 rounds, and then decrease the powder charge by 0.5gr and load another 6 rounds...continue until you reach 10.0gr of powder. Use some form of marking on bottom of each case to distinguish the different powder weights (I use different colored Sharpies and place an "X" across bottom). Use a chronographer or similar radar device to track this velocities. You will quickly find an optimal charge weight for this specific powder, bullet, primer combo in your pistol.
After you burn through your W296, you may consider changing to a faster pistol powder to increase the velocity. The downside of the faster powders , such as Bulleye or TiteGroup, is the very small amount of case fill... there is a risk of double charge and flash-over.
I shoot a 4" S&W 686 that I download to 38SPL and shoot 160gr Round Nose coated bullets. I load for IDPA power factor, which is a bit of a powder puff load, but very accurate and fantastic to shoot. Everybody likes this setup ... I tested a number of different powders and settled on Trail Boss because it shot the cleanest, had best recoil impulse, AND it had 2x-3X amount of case fill as any other popular powders (no risk of a double charge). I can shoot 300 rounds in a session without being punished.