I will try to make the background as brief as possible.
I have been reloading for over 40 years and have recently built a 6br but have never been into loading for competition. The rifle is a 700 that I trued and fitted a Krieger barrel. I chambered using a reamer from Kiff and checked the headspace again tonight and it was .001 as I had chambered it.
I researched many posts on this site and many recommended using the Harrell's full length dies to resize. So I fired cases and sent them it to Harrells and they sent me a die. The die is marked B15.
I was shooting today and a Lapua case that I have fired 5 times and resize with the Harrells die had a case head separation.
My question is, (as I am still quite a novice at this stuff) is the Harrell die to be used EVERY time to resize the case or just when the case starts to become hard to chamber.
This post is not, and I repeat, NOT a judgement of Harrell's dies. They are tools to be used to perform a certain function, and I believe the operator may not know what he is doing.
Any help is appreciated.
Jim
				
			I have been reloading for over 40 years and have recently built a 6br but have never been into loading for competition. The rifle is a 700 that I trued and fitted a Krieger barrel. I chambered using a reamer from Kiff and checked the headspace again tonight and it was .001 as I had chambered it.
I researched many posts on this site and many recommended using the Harrell's full length dies to resize. So I fired cases and sent them it to Harrells and they sent me a die. The die is marked B15.
I was shooting today and a Lapua case that I have fired 5 times and resize with the Harrells die had a case head separation.
My question is, (as I am still quite a novice at this stuff) is the Harrell die to be used EVERY time to resize the case or just when the case starts to become hard to chamber.
This post is not, and I repeat, NOT a judgement of Harrell's dies. They are tools to be used to perform a certain function, and I believe the operator may not know what he is doing.
Any help is appreciated.
Jim
	








