Totally agreeExpecting AR fired brass to work in a bolt gun is asking for problems. Always get new unfired brass to dedicate to a chamber. I could see aggravating oneself if new brass was unobtainable.....but new. .223 brass is abundant.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Totally agreeExpecting AR fired brass to work in a bolt gun is asking for problems. Always get new unfired brass to dedicate to a chamber. I could see aggravating oneself if new brass was unobtainable.....but new. .223 brass is abundant.
Totally agreeI don't even like switching brass from one bolt gun to another. Problems can happen when doing this. Matt
If your sizing cases down that small something out of spec on the die.Hey fellas, I have a rather dumb issue with my .223 FL sizer. First off everything on this is factory, its a tikka .223 rem and a standard non-bushing Redding FL sizing die and this is just a walking varminter so nothing fancy. My fired cases will have a good and ever so 'slight' crush fit when closing the bolt - honestly I'd be fine with that bolt close on a sized case. I wanted to get the die set up to just barely give me a bump (.001 or so ) and when I resize even before I get to bump the shoulder and up to .005 bump (thats the farthest I went) I get a hard bolt close. Also the neck is fine, not over the chamber neck.
My cases do not grow past chamber length, and I over trimmed one just to see if this was the issue and still a hard close. I locked the calipers at the shoulder body junction and even with a .002 bump they slid down the body of the sized case a good bit (.25" or which is a bunch) Other then getting a new die I don't know what to do. Any input?
I think that's the easiest way to get your measurement..Take a half dozen or so fired cases that you would expect to give resistance when you close the bolt after they are sized.
Give these cases a good level of case lube like Imperial. Size a case slowly, retract it and rotate it 120 degrees and size slowly, and dwell at the top of the stroke about 3 to 5 seconds. Repeat by turning the case another 120 degrees and size slowly with a 3 to 5 second dwell.
This rigamarole will give the brass a very thorough sizing and it gives the brass at the shoulder enough time to creep to a final position.
I think you will find that your brass will fit your rifle after all of this. And it might be over resized with the same die.
You really need a tool to measure the fired cases from the head to the datum circle. Measure fired cases then measure resized cases and sneak up on the dimension that allow your stripped bolt to close with a light drag.
When you size hundreds of cases measure each one. You will find that the amount of lube and the speed of sizing will affect the head to shoulder length. Adjust your technique until all cases come out of the die exactly the same at the exact dimension that you want for a perfect fit. You can only do this if you have a means to measure each case and see the variations that occur due to accidental variations in technique.
What slid down the body of a sized case?If your sizing cases down that small something out of spec on the die.
I sort of doubt it is the die. It sounds like one of two things to me or both. Since removing the expander would make me think it wasn't stretching the case on the down stroke as I suspected. Are you using the RCBS shell holder? I have seen slight differences when some mismatched brand shell holders are used with another brand die. You could measure yours, then put some wet dry paper on a flat surface and hone off a thousandth at a time till it starts letting your cases go up inside your die far enough to set that shoulder back about 2 thousandth of what a fired case measures. Another thing that it could be is you need to anneal the cases. Yours could be getting too hard and you're getting too much 'spring back'. Anneal them and they will stay full length sized once out of the die. I'd try this prior to modifying the shell holder. RCBS dies are good dies. Never seen a bad one yet.Thanks Pad, I tried it with out the expander ball at all and it still made it tight. I'm honestly through with this die, it was just a cheap RCBS and has taken up too much time. I'll be ordering a new one tomorrow.
Thanks Pad, I tried it with out the expander ball at all and it still made it tight. I'm honestly through with this die, it was just a cheap RCBS and has taken up too much time. I'll be ordering a new one tomorrow.
I sort of doubt it is the die. It sounds like one of two things to me or both. Since removing the expander would make me think it wasn't stretching the case on the down stroke as I suspected. Are you using the RCBS shell holder? I have seen slight differences when some mismatched brand shell holders are used with another brand die. You could measure yours, then put some wet dry paper on a flat surface and hone off a thousandth at a time till it starts letting your cases go up inside your die far enough to set that shoulder back about 2 thousandth of what a fired case measures. Another thing that it could be is you need to anneal the cases. Yours could be getting too hard and you're getting too much 'spring back'. Anneal them and they will stay full length sized once out of the die. I'd try this prior to modifying the shell holder. RCBS dies are good dies. Never seen a bad one yet.
Your definition of headspace is not headspace...IMOThe locked calipers on from the shoulder body junction of the fired case vs the sized. I normally have around .125-.200" movement with this when bumping .001-.002 on good die/chamber match but this was sliding down further.
Your definition of headspace is not headspace...IMO
TRY one time with your FL sizing die.(on a case that will not chamber).
Adjust die by turning it into the press so that FL die and shell holder met when press ram goes up.. When shell holder and die meet apply 20 to 30 lbs of pressure to press handle... If this piece of brass will not chamber now there is a problem...
The fired brass will chamber because it fits the chamber... When
You 85% size with your FL die it acts like a wave of water going down your fired case.. And it will not chamber. Once your shoulder bottoms out in the top of ur FL die and now force is applied 100% FL sizing has been done. Hope this helps...
Scot grimes
Isn't that the same die you started with? Subtle manufacturing tolerances?I got a regular Redding FL sizer yesterday from the local gun shop and now everything is fine. . Right now I'm able to size without bumping the shoulder and it still chambers fine, also if I bump the shoulder back it still chambers fine.