So my process was using a 21st century expander die and 264 mandrel, then removed the internals from a 6mm dasher Forster FLS die, kept sizing down moving the false shoulder back and tested it by Trying to close the bolt on the brass .... finally found a great spot where it felt like I was crushing the whole way. However, I noticed a few things. A mushrooming on the rim after sizing back down, and when I made a dummy round based on where I felt the lands (on a prior test) the bolt wouldn't close. In fact I couldn't get the bolt to close despite pushing the bullet .050 off the lands. I removed the bullet and realized that the false shoulder I created and neck diameter were all expanded further outwards when I seated the bullet so the previous false shoulder depth I determined did not work anymore once a bullet was seated.
My question is after you all make the false shoulder do you re expand with a 6mm mandrel for good measure prior to testing it in the rifle chamber to see how far the bolt closes? Do you leave the internals with expander ball in the sizing die that you use to size back down and create the false shoulder width so that the neck is opened back up to 6mm?
Searching didnt reveal much in the way of the exact process and details those have successfully done this technique with.
I feel like I'm so close to making this work.
I have had mushrooming on my necks after sizing back down to 6mm when doing a false shoulder. This seems to be normal.
What is the neck diameter for your chamber and what is the loaded round neck diameter? It could be that your chamber neck is too small once you load a round. This means you need to turn your necks down. Mine is a .271" neck and my loaded round is around 0.267-0.268"