Ok, educate me here, maybe I am actually doing this and call it something else.
When reloading, lets say you have only one gun in a specific caliber. Ok you fire your gun and keep your brass, now this brass should fit your chamber. You have neck sizing dies with different bushings for your desired neck tension.
Say you want 4 thousands neck tension or 2 thousands, doesn't matter for my question coming but stick with me here, so you put your bushing in that will give you that amount of tension on the bullet.
Ok, I hear some people say after so many firings with that select brass they bump the shoulder back x thousands, wouldn't the very next shot put you right back to your chambers dimentions?
Now into the lands question.
If you are setting your bullet to be longer than the freebore of your chamber by x amount...pick one...2, 5, 10 thousands or more...wouldn't your bullet given with light neck tension just actually be seated further into the neck of the case when chambered and only be tightly against the lands at the actual freebore length?
When reloading, lets say you have only one gun in a specific caliber. Ok you fire your gun and keep your brass, now this brass should fit your chamber. You have neck sizing dies with different bushings for your desired neck tension.
Say you want 4 thousands neck tension or 2 thousands, doesn't matter for my question coming but stick with me here, so you put your bushing in that will give you that amount of tension on the bullet.
Ok, I hear some people say after so many firings with that select brass they bump the shoulder back x thousands, wouldn't the very next shot put you right back to your chambers dimentions?
Now into the lands question.
If you are setting your bullet to be longer than the freebore of your chamber by x amount...pick one...2, 5, 10 thousands or more...wouldn't your bullet given with light neck tension just actually be seated further into the neck of the case when chambered and only be tightly against the lands at the actual freebore length?