Tikka t3x action, proof barrel.I would trim everything down to the minimum trim length. That way you know you have a constant there.
What type of gun and action is it?
no, took that out, using an expander mandrelExpander ball being used?
yes I do, so the caliper is good I think.If you measure one piece of brass ten times do you get exact same measurement?
Annealing will not make your variation go away. I've measured lots of annealed vs non annealed. Most variation I've ever gotten from multiple presses and cheap to expensive dies is 0.002 across 5 cases.
Are you using your same press for seating bullets? How consistent is coal/cbto.
I would stop at the point where you "turned down a little farther and I was getting no bump, but no lengthening either." Then I would check the chambering in the rifle for fit.
Dont lock it down for good, youll have to adjust as your brass ages so keep that in mindOkay i figured out how to remove the plunger and the 2 cases I bumped 3thousandths the bolt drops completely without any resistance.
The ones with zero bump the bolt falls about 1/3-1/2 way down and then I have to push it down the rest of the way.
I got the die, hornady lock and load thing all set now, and each piece loads in the gun with the bolt falling on its own. I made a witness mark in blue ink on the die, wring and hornady ring so I should notice if it moves.
Thank you very VERY much to everybody that helped me. I think i'm also ditching the imperial die wax and just doing oneshot from now on. the press actually felt smoother (or it was in my head).
Does annealing reduce the need to adjust the die as the brass ages?Dont lock it down for good, youll have to adjust as your brass ages so keep that in mind
It may reduce it but not eliminate it.Does annealing reduce the need to adjust the die as the brass ages?
Thanks @Dusty StevensIt may reduce it but not eliminate it.