CharlieNC
Gold $$ Contributor
I know the trend has swung back to FL sizing vs neck sizing, but there are a couple of points I would like to get a better understanding for regarding how others handle this. First of all this is as applied specifically to my 223 FTR rig. So far I've only competed at 300 yards but when its not in the 10 ring its always my fault.
In the beginning I measured the zero headspace of the chamber, which is 1.462". Initially the brass was 1.460" HS. My reloading routine is to anneal, neck size with Lee collet die, and measure the brass. After several firings the HS is still 1.460". Based on the general recommendations I would FL size by bumping back to 1.458", so theoretically after a few firings I could end up with excessive headspace. Of course I could set the FL die to maintain 1.460" which would only size the neck, or if there was an occasional flier.
At some point the HS will grow and must be FL sized and eventually trimmed. Afterwards I would finish with the Lee collet die to maintain consistent neck dimensions. I also trust that the neck ID will be more consistent with the squeezing onto a mandrel, vs trusting conventional dies to squeeze the neck in consistently. As a comparison I have FL sized using a Forster, with no noticeable difference on the target.
My question is that as long as the brass is not changing HS dimension, what am I missing by only necksizing? And is there something else I am missing?
In the beginning I measured the zero headspace of the chamber, which is 1.462". Initially the brass was 1.460" HS. My reloading routine is to anneal, neck size with Lee collet die, and measure the brass. After several firings the HS is still 1.460". Based on the general recommendations I would FL size by bumping back to 1.458", so theoretically after a few firings I could end up with excessive headspace. Of course I could set the FL die to maintain 1.460" which would only size the neck, or if there was an occasional flier.
At some point the HS will grow and must be FL sized and eventually trimmed. Afterwards I would finish with the Lee collet die to maintain consistent neck dimensions. I also trust that the neck ID will be more consistent with the squeezing onto a mandrel, vs trusting conventional dies to squeeze the neck in consistently. As a comparison I have FL sized using a Forster, with no noticeable difference on the target.
My question is that as long as the brass is not changing HS dimension, what am I missing by only necksizing? And is there something else I am missing?