That is okay, but you still are not saying how much the shellholder or die is compressing, after they touch. One or both have to compress to get anymore movement out of or into the die with the cartridge.
I'm having issues chambering resized brass out of my pre-64 M70 .220 Swift and cannot narrow down the cause.
I had reloaded once fired Hornady brass and noticed while at the range, some of them would not chamber in my M70. I figured I didn't have my FL sizing die turned down far enough. I did fire the rounds out of another .220 Swift later. I then cleaned the brass, ran a few through the FL sizing die, measured headspace with a comparator, and proceeded to test. They would not chamber. I then incrementally started to turn the die down to the point where I can no longer turn it down and still get cam over. Still will not chamber.
Fortunately, I was able to find a piece brass that was 1x fired and would chamber easily in the rifle. I proceeded to take measurements of that case and the other cases I had used to test that would not chamber.
Good Case
Bad case
- Headspace = 1.728
- Case length = 2.196
- Case width at base= 0.442
- Case width at mid point = 0.425
- Case width just below neck = 0.405
In every way I measured, it seems the bad case is smaller so I cannot figure out why it won't chamber but the other case will.
- Headspace = Started at 1.728, took it all the way down to 1.722
- Case length = 2.196
- Case width at base= 0.440
- Case width at mid point = 0.425
- Case width just below neck = 0.404
I'm guessing it might have something to do with the brass having been fired out of two different rifles but considering all the brass went through the FL die anyway, I'd think it would get it consistent. Both the good and bad cases all chamber in the other rifle, which is a Ruger No1.
What am I missing!?!?
Maybe buy one of those devices you drop a loaded round into to ensure it fits "specs". If it drops in and is flush or below flush - you know the problem is not likely your dies or press - but rather your rifle.
Would someone explain this Camming over ? If your Shellholder is touching the bottom of the die, how can you cause any further reach by camming your ram/linkage any further, all you are doing is putting strain on the ram/linkage, are you not ?
Good Eye I think I see it toI think I see a bulge, look just outside the red box, top right, in your picture. It could just be an optical illusion. Just brain storming here.
Jim
I'm having issues chambering resized brass out of my pre-64 M70 .220 Swift and cannot narrow down the cause.
I had reloaded once fired Hornady brass and noticed while at the range, some of them would not chamber in my M70. I figured I didn't have my FL sizing die turned down far enough. I did fire the rounds out of another .220 Swift later. I then cleaned the brass, ran a few through the FL sizing die, measured headspace with a comparator, and proceeded to test. They would not chamber. I then incrementally started to turn the die down to the point where I can no longer turn it down and still get cam over. Still will not chamber.
I'm guessing it might have something to do with the brass having been fired out of two different rifles but considering all the brass went through the FL die anyway, I'd think it would get it consistent. Both the good and bad cases all chamber in the other rifle, which is a Ruger No1.
What am I missing!?!?
that is the 1st piece of reloading equipment i buy when trying a new cartridgeMaybe buy one of those devices you drop a loaded round into to ensure it fits "specs". If it drops in and is flush or below flush - you know the problem is not likely your dies or press - but rather your rifle.
This is a problem that pops up periodically, brass fired in one rifle and even after resizing won't fire in another rifle. Solution? Stick with brass shot in each individual rifle.
I had a Winchester model 70 once that had the head space set too short and no matter how far the dies was run down you could not resize it small enough to fit the gun. That is no easy fix on a shouldered barrel set too deep which is why I own Savage rifles now, I can adjust them as needed.